Spectacular Showhouse 21 TOP DESIGNERS IN OUR FLOWER JAN•FEB 2023 HOUSE l GARDEN l LIFESTYLE
Contents flowermag.com | 9 |
32 The FLOWER Showhouse Step inside this Regency-style home full of inspiring interiors imagined by 21 renowned designers. JANUARY•FEBRUARY 2023
ON THE COVER: Inside the FLOWER Showhouse, Suzanne Kasler’s French-inspired salon o ers a multipurpose
space
that has every entertaining need covered with its array of seating areas on one end and a sophisticated kitchen on the other. Photographed by Emily Followill.
PHOTO BY HECTOR SANCHEZ
IN BLOOM
17
Decorate: Mood Every beautiful room starts with an inspiration. Take a peek at some of those early influences for the FLOWER Showhouse.
22
Decorate: Flowers Holly Bryan’s enchanting mix of flowers and foliage captures the soft sophistication of designer Tammy Connor’s secret garden-inspired bedroom in the FLOWER showhouse.
26
Architect: Q&A Atlanta-based architect Peter Block discusses the Regency design of the FLOWER showhouse and what makes this 19th-century style relevant for 21st-century living.
28
Landscape Architect: Q&A Atlanta landscape architect John Howard shares the inspirations that have shaped his work, as well as the thought process behind the elegant surroundings of the showhouse.
IN EVERY ISSUE
Watering Can 12 What’s Online? 30 Sources 123
Contents
| 10 | FLOWER January•February 2023
DEPARTMENTS
PHOTOS: (CLOCKWISE FROM TOP LEFT) BY EMILY FOLLOWILL; BY DAVID HILLEGAS (2)
Watering can
WHEN I FIRST GLIMPSED the rendering of our FLOWER Showhouse, wrought by the eminent Atlanta architect Peter Block, I had to pinch myself. It struck me as a dream realized—a vision of elegance with beautiful proportions, tailored and restrained, as only the Regency period could produce. I could hardly imagine a more perfect jewel box to house the treasures of great interior design. Then I learned that the gardens were being conceived by the esteemed Atlanta landscape architect John Howard. Top this o with the project being realized by luxury home builders Young & Meathe, and I knew this house was destined to be “a thing of beauty” and a “joy forever.”
Next, we called on the wisdom, taste,
—JOHN KEATS, “ENDYMION, BOOK 1”
and experience of Charlotte Moss and Suzanne Kasler to fill the roles of Honorary Chair and Design Chair respectively. I felt certain that a host of talented professionals and marquee companies would want to play—and they did, from highly acclaimed interior and floral designers to iconic
brands within the design industry.
Atlanta, as a grande dame of Southern cities so rich with talent, is the perfect location for FLOWER’s inaugural multi-designer showhouse. From my first foray to ADAC as a neophyte in the design business to my most recent visit to this house, with loads of FLOWER business in between, I have found that this city holds a special place in my heart. To be a part of this e ort while helping support the spectacular Atlanta Ballet in the process is just about the greatest honor and opportunity of my career thus far.
I hope you enjoy this look inside— and behind the scenes—of our FLOWER Showhouse. We are excited to share it with you.
Please send your comments, triumphs, challenges & questions to: wateringcan@fl owermag.com
OR: Letters to the Editor
Flower magazine I P.O. Box 530645 I Birmingham, AL 35253
Get the Flower email newsletter! Sign up at fl owermag.com/news
A Note
from the Editor
| 12 | FLOWER January•February 2023
Love and SDG, Margot Shaw EDITOR-IN-CHIEF
A thing of beauty is a joy forever: Its loveliness increases; it will never Pass into nothingness; but still will keep A bower quiet for us, and a sleep Full of sweet dreams, and health, and quiet breathing.
Honorary Chair Charlotte Moss
MARGOT’S PORTRAIT BY BECKY LUIGART-STAYNER
Design Chair Suzanne Kasler
VOLUME 17, ISSUE 1
Margot Shaw FOUNDER/EDITOR-IN-CHIEF
Julie Gillis MANAGING EDITOR
Nicole Gerrity Haas ART DIRECTOR
DIGITAL
Jason Burnett DIGITAL GENERAL MANAGER
EDITOR-AT-LARGE
Karen Carroll
CONTRIBUTING EDITORS
Missie Neville Crawford
Alice Welsh Doyle
James Farmer
Kirk Reed Forrester
Amanda Smith Fowler
Marion Laffey Fox Elaine Griffin Tara Guérard
Sallie Lewis
Frances MacDougall
Robert Martin
Tovah Martin
Cathy Still McGowin
Charlotte Moss
Ellen S. Padgett
Matthew Robbins Margaret Zainey Roux
Frances Schultz Lydia Somerville Sybil Sylvester
For editorial inquiries: editorial@flowermag.com
Julie Durkee PUBLISHER
Jennel O’Brien ASSOCIATE PUBLISHER, SALES & MARKETING Marlee Ledbetter MARKETING COORDINATOR
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For change of address and subscription inquiries: 877.400.3074 or CustomerService@FlowerMag.info
ADVISORY BOARD
Paula Crockard
Winn Crockard
Gavin Duke Gay Estes
Katie Baker Lasker
Mary Evelyn McKee Michael Mundy
Ben Page
Angèle Parlange
Renny Reynolds Scott Shepherd Remco van Vliet Evie Vare Louise Wrinkle
Decorate: Inspiration • Decorate: Flowers
Architect: Q&A • Landscape Architect: Q&A
in Bloom
Behind the Design
EVERY BEAUTIFUL ROOM STARTS WITH AN INSPIRATION. HERE’S A PEEK AT SOME OF THOSE EARLY INFLUENCES FOR THE FLOWER SHOWHOUSE.
Produced and styled by Missie Neville Crawford, Maren Edwards, and Sutton Ward Photography by David Hillegas
flowermag.com | 17 |
in Bloom DECORATE: INSPIRATION 11 | 18 | FLOWER January•February 2023 1 Farfalle Large Semi-Flush light fixture from Visual Comfort & Co. 2 Modern Mosaic Mezquita fabric by S. Harris through Fabricut 3 Ludlow Volta Lavatory faucet from Waterworks 4 Stingray wallpaper from Cowtan & Tout 5 Raineri wallpaper in Falco from Fromental 6 Windsong wallpaper from Cowtan & Tout 7 Sailor’s Sea Blue paint from Benjamin Moore 8 Primrose paint (top) and Oyster paint (bottom) from Domingue Architectural Finishes 9 Kravet Basics Collection fabric from Kravet 10 Dahlia cowhide rug custom-designed by Barry Dixon for Kyle Bunting 11 Silk Sari Bead necklaces from J. Catma 9 2 6 4 3 10 7 8 5 1 Items not listed are from designers’ personal collections.
flowermag.com | 19 | 1 Calais large semi-flush light fixture from
Comfort & Co. 2 Arendal rattan bar tool set from Be Home 3 Arkadi fabric in Eldorado from Pierre Frey 4 Janas Cedro fabric from Zak + Fox 5 Tiburon Blush leather from Hancock & Moore 6 Crazy Quilt fabric from Clarence House 7 19th-century Continental cabinet from Ainsworth-Noah 8 Grasscloth wallcovering from Ainsworth-Noah 9 Hand-painted wallpaper by Gracie & Alexa Hampton, The Collaboration 10 Pangkeb Zepra-Peony fabric from Namay Samay 11 Isadore: Galon Brodé trim from The Michael Aiduss Collection for Houlés 12 Frieze Collection trim in Golden Green from Décor de Paris 13 Pasha Ombre from Fortuny 14 Cadence table by Ray Booth for Hickory Chair 11 10 8 12 13 14 9 2 6 4 3 7 5 1
Visual
in Bloom DECORATE: INSPIRATION | 20 | FLOWER January•February 2023 1 Raineri wallpaper in Pavone from Fromental 2 Celadon Mist wallpaper from Gracie 3 Gardenia soap from Tamanohada 4 Chareau 4 sofa from Munder Skiles 5 Rose & Fern fabric from Fabricut 6 Opus XII Rose Incense perfume from Amouage 7 Suri fabric in custom color from Namay Samay 2 6 4 3 7 5 1 Items not listed are from designers’ personal collections.
Holly Bryan of Holly Bryan Design
HOLLY BRYAN’S ENCHANTING MIX OF FLOWERS AND FOLIAGE CAPTURES THE SOFT SOPHISTICATION OF DESIGNER TAMMY CONNOR’S SECRET GARDEN-INSPIRED BEDROOM IN THE FLOWER SHOWHOUSE.
Produced by Margaret Zainey Roux • Photography by Robert Peterson
Plato was well known for his philosophy that art imitates life, while Aristotle believed that life imitates art. When asked which of these two ancient doctrines she subscribes to, Holly Bryan didn’t have to think twice before replying “both.”
The Atlanta-based floral design phenom backed up her answer with a masterpiece of her own making—a bountiful, fresh arrangement inspired by an abstract floral painting by Ashley Cunningham. The piece, Ordinary House Plant 2, is one of three original works by various artists featured in a
secret garden-inspired bedroom designed by Tammy Connor Interior Design for the Atlanta Showhouse.
“I was captivated by the rich contrasts in the painting,” Holly says. “I love the dramatic juxtapositions of the light and bright hues, along with the heavy brushstrokes coupled with simple botanical drawings. For my arrangement, I took a similar approach and chose flowers and foliage with distinct shapes, textures, and colors that, despite their di erences, come together harmoniously and organically like blossoms in a real-life garden.”
FROM FAR LEFT TO RIGHT: The painting by Ashley Cunningham served as Holly’s inspiration for her floral design. She also pulled colors from other elements in Tammy Connor’s bedroom design, including the linen floral print (Penny Morrison “Jaipur Berry”), the graphic pillow (Katie Leede “Mughal Gardens” in Melon), and the polka dot fabric (Lisa Fine Textiles “Tika” in Blush).
in Bloom DECORATE: FLOWERS | 22 | FLOWER January•February 2023
Turn to page 24 for step-by-step instructions
MATERIALS
Coated chicken wire
Plastic liner
Waterproof floral tape
Leucothoe Nandina
Lamb’s ears
Banksia
Calycina Lisianthus Cappuccino Beige Rose
Rex begonia Cymbidium orchid
Asparagus fern
STEP 1 Mold chicken wire to fit the plastic liner, and secure it inside by making an X across the top using floral tape. Place the liner inside the bowl, and fill with water 1 inch from the top.
STEP 2 Create a base layer by inserting long branches of Leucothoe followed by Nandina. Loosely add in Lamb’s ears to fill in any holes.
STEP 3 Insert Banksia at three di erent heights, and round out the arrangement with Calycina. Add Lisianthus to evenly disperse color and texture. Clip roses at varying heights, and strip the stems of all leaves, including those near the blossom. Create small clusters of roses, and gently insert them at varying angles and heights.
STEP 4 Cut the stems of the Rex begonia, and insert the blooms at varying heights and angles. Split the Cymbidium orchid in two. Insert one stem vertically toward the top of the arrangement and the other to the side.
STEP 5 Rotate the arrangement to check all sides. Lightly fill in any holes with sprigs of asparagus fern to complete the final layer of color and texture.
in Bloom DECORATE: FLOWERS | 24 | FLOWER January•February 2023
5 4 3 2 1
STEP-BY-STEP INSTRUCTIONS
“I chose flowers and foliage that come together organically like blossoms in a real-life garden.”
—FLORAL DESIGNER HOLLY BRYAN
From the Ground Up
ATLANTA-BASED ARCHITECT PETER BLOCK DISCUSSES THE REGENCY DESIGN OF THE FLOWER SHOWHOUSE AND WHAT MAKES THIS 19TH-CENTURY STYLE RELEVANT FOR 21ST-CENTURY LIVING.
By Karen Carroll • Photography by Brian Bieder
Flower: We’ve admired your houses in Atlanta and beyond for a long time, and we’re excited that our readers will experience your architecture through the FLOWER Showhouse. How would you characterize your overall design philosophy?
Peter Block: Whatever the design of a house may be, make sure it has style. I’ll mix different ideas and elements, but the end goal is for it to feel and look good, period. I liken it to a woman wearing jeans, a white T-shirt, and a Chanel
jacket. She has great style, but she’s not wearing a pure outfit. That’s often the perspective I come from architecturally.
How do you begin conceptualizing your designs?
Everything starts with a conversation about the clients’ needs and what we want to happen. Then I work on a layout while thinking through things such as the lifestyle flow, internal and external vistas, and where the light originates. From there, the architectural style
in Bloom ARCHITECT: Q&A | 26 | FLOWER January•February 2023
PORTRAIT COURTESY OF PETER BLOCK
develops, whether it’s European or American, traditional or contemporary. I consider myself fluent in all architectural languages. In the case of the showhouse, the style is Regency, so we’re obviously speaking English.
While we consider ourselves to be somewhat fluent in English, we’d appreciate a little “Regency 101.” What are some of the hallmarks of the style that are articulated in the Showhouse?
The literal definition is the time period between 1811-1820, when George IV was Prince Regent. However, it extends well beyond that stylistically. John Nash and Sir John Soane were prominent English architects of the era, and I drew inspiration from both of them. Regency style has all the classic principles of Georgian architecture simplified and pared down—largely a function of people wanting things a little cleaner, less fussy, and more deliberate. Some of the key elements include straightforward blocks of mass with a curved and columned portico on the front and a rectangular porch on the back to extend the house out into the landscape. Exteriors are often white stuccoed brick, which allows the form to stand out. Most of the homes have black doors, long windows, and tall ceilings. Interestingly, there is a well-established tradition of the style here in Atlanta, as the renowned architect Philip Trammell Shutze designed a number of Regency houses in the 1930s.
What particularly inspires you about Sir John Soane’s Museum and perhaps made its way into the Showhouse? I was especially inspired by how Soane brought light into the spaces. For the Showhouse, we designed a skylight at the peak of the roof, and that’s straight from Soane’s book, even if the detailing is different. It brings light into the middle portion of the house. We also employed tall windows and doors to bring light deep into the rooms. And we laid out almost every space with windows on at least two sides to make sure the light is balanced.
What makes Regency still desirable for the way we live today?
It’s very pliable. Regency can bend classical if you want it to, or it can be purely modern if you prefer that. By changing things up with the décor, you can completely alter the way it feels. If you had a really formal Georgian house, you wouldn’t have all those options.
You mention the “Johns” as influences. Did any specific historic buildings serve as references?
I took many trips to London to drill down the style. I walked up and down the streets around Regent’s Park, which was the brainchild of Nash. One of the most informative experiences I had was a dinner with a group of design professionals at Sir John Soane’s Museum at Lincoln’s Inn Fields. I’ve been there numerous times, but this opportunity allowed me to avoid bumper-to-bumper crowds, enjoy a meal with friends, and “live” in the house and museum for a few hours. I could really immerse myself in the nuances of the house and take lots of photographs of the details.
Are there any challenges to consider with this style? It’s a matter of editing, and the bones have to be so strong and clear that it can tolerate that editing. With some more exuberant architectural styles, you can cover up a lot of “sins,” if you will, with all kinds of trim and different layers. That’s not as easy to do with Regency. I’m reminded of a quote from Frank Lloyd Wright: “A doctor can bury his mistakes, but an architect can only advise his clients to plant vines.” Fortunately, we didn’t create those kinds of mistakes. But with any house style, you need things that are at human scale so people feel comfortable, at room scale so the space feels good, at house scale so each room feels right within the house, and at community scale so the house sits appropriately in the neighborhood. And that whole sequencing can be tricky with Regency. Since it doesn’t have as many elements to play with, you have to be spot on.
We think you got it just right. Thank you. Given that the spaces are designed to be flexible, it’s been fun to see all the varied interpretations these all-star designers bring to their rooms!
flowermag.com | 27 |
“Regency can bend classical if you want it to, or it can be purely modern if you prefer that.”
—ARCHITECT PETER BLOCK
Flower: When chatting with design professionals, we always want a little backstory. Did you grow up gardening or in a design-centric home?”
John Howard: I grew up in Atlanta in a mid-century house with modest gardens. I loved to work outside, plant things, and build things. I always had an interest in architecture and did drafting for architects and engineers during my high school and college years. I also liked to draw and do graphic design, and I was supported by my family in all my artistic endeavors.
The Great Outdoors
ATLANTA LANDSCAPE ARCHITECT JOHN HOWARD SHARES THE INSPIRATIONS THAT HAVE SHAPED HIS WORK, AS WELL AS THE THOUGHT PROCESS BEHIND THE ELEGANT SURROUNDINGS OF THE SHOWHOUSE.
By Margot Shaw • Photography by Brian Bieder
What was your first indication that you would design landscapes?
I discovered landscape architecture when I was in high school, which combined many of my interests including architecture, horticulture, and being outside. It was an obvious choice to study landscape architecture in college. Fortunately, the University of Georgia has one of the top programs in the country.
What would you describe as your defining project—the one where you said, “Okay, I can do this”?
There was not one defining project but, rather, a series of progressive projects that each seemed like the next step along the way. Design came naturally, and each
design challenge was exciting. Today, my favorite projects are always the ones in which I’m currently engaged.
Where have you been most inspired by landscapes?
I have been most inspired by my travels abroad. The landscapes and gardens of Europe have had an immense impact on my personal style and perspective. Travel continues to be my biggest teacher, so it’s a part of my schedule every year. Just this year, I have spent time in the South of France, Belgium, England, Ireland, and Italy. The English country manor gardens are some of my favorites, and Hidcote Manor Garden and Bourton House Garden in the Cotswolds rate at the top.
in Bloom LANDSCAPE ARCHITECT: Q&A | 28 | FLOWER January•February 2023
PORTRAIT COURTESY OF JOHN HOWARD
Russell Page, the famous English garden designer from the 20th century, was a big influence as my personal garden design style emerged. But I am currently inspired by many of my contemporaries who are producing amazing work today around the world, including Fernando Caruncho, Paul Bangay, and Luciano Giubbilei, to name a few.
The showhouse, with its English Regency style, seems like the perfect pairing for your work. How did you feel about the project?
I have always appreciated the organized nature of the Regency style and the simplicity of detail typically seen. I’m a minimalist at heart, so this style appeals to my
OPPOSITE PAGE: The poolside parterre garden is planted with a carpet of white violas and cardoons (also called artichoke thistle) in the center. And framing the pool are four hornbeam trees, known in English folklore as ”ladders between worlds.”
LEFT: As a focal point for the pool area, John used this oversized Italian olive jar and top dry cast by Longshadow. The design references jars seen in many Renaissance gardens.
aesthetic. I always design with the architecture of the dwelling as the basis of the garden layout and details. Creating garden rooms with lawns, hedges, and green architectural forms is what I love to do, and it certainly was the right approach with this beautiful home.
Of course, a showhouse is a different animal from your typical client-driven projects. How did you create without a “client”? Was it easier or more challenging?
Since we didn’t know who would be living in this home, we designed a landscape that would appeal to a family or an empty-nester couple. The plan is flexible with garden room spaces laid out that have potential for future evolution. The four-quadrant parterre across from the pool has a footprint that could accommodate a future pool pavilion. More elaborate gardens also could be developed in a number of the spaces. It wasn’t necessarily easier, just a different process of imagining future scenarios for use.
Finally, what do you think constitutes a successful garden/landscape?
I think the most successful landscapes are the ones that are simple yet beautifully inspiring, and the most successful gardens are the ones that are loved and nurtured. You can always tell by the level of attention and maintenance that they receive.
flowermag.com | 29 |
“The landscapes and gardens of Europe have had an immense impact on my personal style and perspective.”
—LANDSCAPE ARCHITECT JOHN HOWARD
Are there one or two design heroes of yours who have really influenced your aesthetic and philosophy?
What’s Online?
Lights! Camera! Showhouse!
The FLOWER magazine team documented the Atlanta Showhouse rooms and furnishings, shooting hours of video footage of the home and designer interviews to bring each space to life. Now we are sharing this extraordinary house with the rest of world. Look for our video introduction to the showhouse with highlights from editor-in-chief Margot Shaw, honorary showhouse chair Charlotte Moss, and design chair Suzanne Kasler. Then be sure to watch our video tour of the house for an in-depth look at each room narrated by its interior designer on the FLOWER magazine YouTube channel and at flowermag.com/showhouse.
More Flowers
These pages are filled with gorgeous flowers from the floral design teams who created arrangements for the house, but there’s even more online. We’ve captured scores of fantastic florals from Atlanta Planters; Canaan Marshall Designs; East Pine Designs; Garden Party Designs; Gloriosa Design; Holly Bryan Design; Kappi Naftel; Kirk Whitfield; Lush Life Home & Garden; Mary Pinson; Michal Evans Flora & Event Design; Miss Milly’s Event Rentals, Florals, & Design; Parties to Die For; Robert Long Flora & Event Design; and Wildflower Designs. Also, learn more about the roof garden at the showhouse and the incredible European hornbeams in the landscape. See more at flowermag.com/showhouseflorals.
Parties to Die For
DESIGNERS’ GUIDE TO ATLANTA
There’s a reason we chose Atlanta as the location for our FLOWER Showhouse—it has not only become an epicenter for the design world but also a favorite destination for travelers across the country and the world. To get the inside scoop on what to see, where to shop, and what to eat in this booming metropolis, we turned to the showhouse interior designers who call “The ATL” home. Discover these hotspots at flowermag.com/atl.
Trending Now at FlowerMag.com
| 30 | FLOWER January•February 2023
(CLOCKWISE
PHOTOS:
FROM TOP LEFT) BY EMILY FOLLOWILL; BY JASON GETZ/GETZ IMAGES; BY EMILY FOLLOWILL (2)
Kappi Naftel
WELCOME TO THE FLOWER
| 32 | FLOWER January•February 2023
SHOWHOUSE
Located on a verdant, winding street in Atlanta’s Buckhead neighborhood, this Regency-style house, with its stately yet understated bones and interiors designed for 21st-century living, conveys a mature sensibility that belies its status as the new kid on the block.
Text by KAREN CARROLL
Styling by AMANDA SMITH FOWLER
Photography by EMILY FOLLOWILL & DAVID HILLEGAS
Additional Photography by BRIAN BIEDER & HECTOR SANCHEZ
Let’s begin with sheer numbers. Take a dream team of architect, builder, and landscape architect; add 21 top-tier interior design firms who come bearing 35 wallpapers and too-many-to-tally fabrics, furnishings, and objects from vendors and artisans with chicness factored to the nth degree; and finally, round it all off with 15 wildly artistic floral designers. Total all the figures and they equal one showstopping FLOWER Showhouse. While our approach to the math may not follow the conventional textbook method, this Regency-style house, nestled atop a gently sloping lot in Atlanta’s Buckhead community, also proves to be anything but formulaic.
“Showhouses are like a decorating collage,” says Honorary Chair Charlotte Moss. “They bring people with different viewpoints, personalities, and styles to the table—and here, we also have the unifying element of flowers. I can’t think of a designer who doesn’t love what botanicals bring to their interiors, whether fresh from the garden or interpreted in a fabric or painting.”
When FLOWER Editor-in-Chief Margot Shaw first pored over the renderings and floor plans for this house, she was immediately drawn to the integrity and sensitivity of Peter Block’s architectural design. “The home announces itself graciously,” she says. “It’s sizable but without pretense. It also harkens back to a historic period I love and is in keeping with the classical nature of many of Atlanta’s great houses.”
The opportunity to work within the architecturally significant house enticed decorating professionals from across the country, including some, such as Design Chair Suzanne Kasler, with offices little more than a stone’s throw away from the Showhouse’s backyard. “Each designer has their own inspiration with an amazing level of customization and craftsmanship,” says Suzanne. “And even though we didn’t collectively plan for each room to relate to the next, they all visually work well together.”
We invite you to come inside the FLOWER Showhouse for a closer look. As you page through the exquisitely executed rooms and peek behind the curtains and into the thoughtful minds of those who created them, we hope you’ll be mesmerized down to every last detail. Indeed, we’re counting on it.
| 34 | FLOWER January•February 2023
flowermag.com | 35 | FLOWER SHOWHOUSE
MICHELLE NUSSBAUMER
HALL
flowermag.com | 37 | FLOWER SHOWHOUSE
envision a well-traveled owner who loves beauty and collections—she’s
and
a
irreverent. Think
SPONSORS BALLARD DESIGNS • CHELSEA HOUSE • CLARENCE HOUSE • DOMINGUE ARCHITECTURAL FINISHES • FABRICUT • FINE PAINTS OF EUROPE • KINGDOM WOODWORKS • MAITLAND-SMITH • MATOUK • PAUL MONTGOMERY • THE RUG COMPANY • THE SHADE STORE • SHERLE WAGNER INTERNATIONAL • TEMMER • THIBAUT • VISUAL COMFORT & CO. • WATERWORKS •
ENTRANCE
AND ADJOINING POWDER ROOM FLORAL DESIGN SYBIL SYLVESTER OF WILDFLOWER DESIGNS “I
a grande dame but young,
definitely
little
Doris Duke meets Isabella Stewart Gardner.”
Michelle Nussbaumer’s Point of View
GLOBAL INFLUENCES
Michelle encased the room with wallpaper she designed for Paul Montgomery. “It’s inspired by Villa Ephrussi de Rothschild in Cap Ferrat, which has the most extraordinary series of gardens. This wallpaper is a patchwork of the gardens’ flowers from around the world.” The Clarence House fabric on the custom console and lampshades brings in a dash of mod while echoing the color of the rug from The Rug Company. The chandelier is from Visual Comfort & Co.
DESIGN DETAIL
The hardware Michelle designed with Modern Matter is based on one of her personal pieces of lapis lazuli jewelry.
POWDER POWER
“My spaces represent a lot of my favorite places and things. The powder room wallpaper is based on a Venetian palazzo, and the printed velvet depicts my grandmother’s crazy quilt that I still own.” Turquoise foo dogs stand guard atop brackets.
| 38 | FLOWER January•February 2023
“I believe in living life and decorating in technicolor, served up with a worldly dish of pattern.”
| 40 | FLOWER January•February 2023
SUZANNE KASLER
“I’m always inspired by Paris and everything French. I call this large space the salon because with the kitchen on one end and multiple conversation groups on the other, it allows a lot of activities to happen at the same time.”
flowermag.com | 41 | FLOWER SHOWHOUSE
THE SALON FLORAL DESIGN SYBIL SYLVESTER OF WILDFLOWER DESIGNS
SPONSORS CHESNEYS • DOMINGUE ARCHITECTURAL FINISHES • HICKORY CHAIR • KINGDOM WOODWORKS • LA CORNUE • SHERLE WAGNER INTERNATIONAL • TEMMER • VIKING • WATERWORKS •
Suzanne
Kasler’s Point of View
TAKE A CLOSER LOOK
“I found the vintage Fortuny panels at High Point, and they ultimately inspired the room’s palette. We put burlap on my Loire chairs for Hickory Chair and then ran the panels down the middle.”
TAKE A PAGE FROM THE DESIGNER’S BOOK
“Trims on upholstery and curtains are that extra element you don’t always notice immediately when you walk into a room, but they make such impact.”
ON SEAMLESSLY INTEGRATING THE KITCHEN
“I have a collection for La Cornue, and the stove in my new color—Graphite— looks like jewelry in the room.” A sculptural plaster light fixture found in Paris hangs over the marble island by Temmer (preceding pages) and provides artistic balance to the Kimo Minton painting over the mantel. “We also painted all the iron doors and windows white because I wanted the eye to see through to the garden without getting stopped by the naturally dark metal.”
TRICKS OF THE TRADE
“The Phillip Jeffries geometric wallpaper on the ceiling pulls the entire space together. The salon is so open and seemed to be ‘falling’ into the hall, so I added interior curtains to define the room.” Suzanne’s workroom made the striped curtains from the two main fabrics she used elsewhere. The Sir John Soane mantel from Chesneys reflects the Regency architecture.
| 42 | FLOWER January•February 2023
“I always look at the architecture envelope first; then I determine how the room will flow and how furnishings and objects should interact.”
BARRY DIXON LIBRARY
DESIGN KEITH ROBINSON OF GLORIOSA DESIGN
flowermag.com | 45 | FLOWER SHOWHOUSE
giving Jane
SPONSORS CHESNEYS • CURREY & COMPANY • FINE PAINTS OF EUROPE • REPLACEMENTS, LTD. • THE SHADE STORE • SHERLE WAGNER INTERNATIONAL • STROHEIM • VERVAIN • VISUAL COMFORT & CO.
FLORAL
“I’m
Austen’s Mr. Darcy a 21st-century update of his library at Pemberley.”
Barry Dixon’s Point of View
TAKE A PAGE FROM THE DESIGNER’S BOOK
“Bring classic elements forward in a modern way.” Rather than drapery treatments for a pair of oval windows, Barry designed metal mesh screens that diffuse light and punctuate the busts atop see-through pedestals.
ON THE SHELF
Barry enlisted library expert Kinsey Marable to curate a booklover’s dream collection that ranges from history and architecture to gardening and children’s classics. Objects interspersed throughout shelves provide subtle clues to the subjects close at hand.
HOW BARRY BRINGS THE BOTANICAL
“We explored the masculine side of floral inspiration with a larger scale and a woodsy palette.” Barry designed the dahlia cowhide rug by Kyle Bunting and used fabrics by Vervain, Stroheim, and TylerGraphic.
| 46 | FLOWER January•February 2023
“Inspiration is everywhere—it lurks in foreign ports of call and waits patiently in our own backyard.”
ALEXA HAMPTON
DINING ROOM
FLORAL DESIGN
ROBERT LONG FLORA & EVENT DESIGN
“I consider animal patterns a neutral, even with all of their vivacity and individuality. This hand-painted wallpaper I designed doesn’t have a single line or striation that is the same, but it’s still interpreted as a repeating motif.”
| 48 | FLOWER January•February 2023
SPONSORS CHESNEYS • CLARENCE HOUSE • GRACIE • KRAVET • REPLACEMENTS, LTD. • THE SHADE STORE • SHERLE WAGNER INTERNATIONAL • THEODORE ALEXANDER • VISUAL COMFORT & CO. •
flowermag.com | 49 | FLOWER SHOWHOUSE
Alexa Hampton’s Point of View
TABLE TALK
The china, glassware, and silver are from Replacements. “I love to bring color on the table, and I particularly like pairing purple with green. I also often use white chairs around a dark wood table or vice versa.”
GOING WILD
“Really fabulous green rooms like those by Givenchy, who always lurks in the back of my mind, and the ones in Denise Hale’s house in San Francisco, which my father decorated years ago, remain pivotal in my imagination. I think of this as my green room, even though it’s technically not. Gracie’s tiger pattern beautifully combines with accents of emerald and classical elements such as my Chesneys mantel.”
BACK STORY
“Bill Blass once told me how important the back of a bride’s dress is because that’s what people see most as she goes up the aisle and stands during the ceremony. I’ve always drawn the parallel to dining room chairs—you’ve got to bring it so they don’t seem lonely when they’re not being used. I put the ‘moneymaker’ pattern on the back of my Theodore Alexander chairs, where I also didn’t have to consider the practicalities of wear and tear.”
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“I gotta have more cowbell .”
MELANIE MILLNER
CATERING KITCHEN AND BUTLER’S PANTRY
FLORAL DESIGN KAPPI NAFTEL
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SPONSORS DOMINGUE ARCHITECTURAL FINISHES • KINGDOM WOODWORKS • SHERLE WAGNER INTERNATIONAL • VIKING • VISUAL COMFORT & CO. • WATERWORKS •
“This is the workhorse kitchen, and I wanted to keep it understated but elegant at the same time.”
Melanie Millner’s Point of View
MAIN COURSE
The design began with a gray plaster pastellone finish from Domingue that covers the Kingdom Woodworks cabinetry, ceiling, walls, and hood. “It’s super durable but has such texture and depth, along with an ethereal glow.” With the exception of a Viking range, the appliances have integrated fronts. Melanie kept all cabinet panels simple with streamlined custom hardware in unlacquered brass. Accents of red, as well as movement in the stone countertops and backsplash, give the room pops of energy.
ART MATTERS
On the back wall, Melanie hung a trio of mixed media works by Dane Carder. The indoor/outdoor rug by Stark is stylish yet easy to clean when the pasta sauce inevitably splatters.
WORTH A CLOSER LOOK
“As you move from the dining room to the butler’s pantry, you glimpse this fabulous gold wallpaper lining the display case. It needed that bit of glamour to connect.”
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“A room should have the soul of those who inhabit it.”
BUNNY WILLIAMS
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“Most people use the back entry
the front door,
SPONSORS BALLARD DESIGNS • CURREY & COMPANY • DOMINGUE ARCHITECTURAL FINISHES • FINE PAINTS OF EUROPE • KINGDOM WOODWORKS • LEE JOFA • SHERLE WAGNER INTERNATIONAL • TEMMER • THIBAUT • WATERWORKS
CUTTING ROOM, POWDER ROOM, AND ADJOINING WEST GALLERY FLORAL DESIGN MICHAL EVANS FLORA & EVENT DESIGN
more than
so it needs to be beautiful, as well as practical.”
WORTH A CLOSER LOOK
“A place to pot plants and arrange flowers is a necessity for me because they give life to a room. But this space also serves as a laundry, and if you don’t garden, you can always bathe your dogs in the sink. The beautiful pewter countertops from Francois & Co. wear well, and I love the lacquered blue cabinetry.”
Bunny Williams’ Point of View
A TAPESTRY OF DETAIL
“The tapestry wallpaper I designed for Lee Jofa instantly gives the feeling of walking into a garden.” Concentric circles in Bunny’s chandelier for Currey & Company reiterate the form of the rose window. The faux bois demilune and gold mirror are from her collection for Ballard Designs.
GRACEFUL ADDITION
With space at a premium in the powder room, the designer floated a serpentine vanity in the corner and carried through the progression of blues in a smaller-scaled pattern from Thibaut.
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“Something old, something new, and different textures make a room more interesting.”
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CATHY KINCAID
PRIMARY BEDROOM
“I’ve always loved Marella Agnelli’s pink-and-white bedroom in Morocco. I tend to think of a bedroom as more of a woman’s domain, where you’re allowed to take a softer, more feminine approach. But surprisingly, men love it, too.”
flowermag.com | 61 | FLOWER SHOWHOUSE SPONSORS CHESNEYS • MATOUK • REPLACEMENTS, LTD. • SHERLE WAGNER INTERNATIONAL
FLORAL DESIGN MICHAL EVANS FLORA & EVENT DESIGN
Cathy Kincaid’s Point of View
DESIGN DETAIL
Exquisitely intricate embroidery by Namay Samay edges bed hangings and curtains.
IF WALLS COULD TALK
“When I traveled to India several years ago, I visited the Baby Taj (I’timad-ud-Daulah) in Agra, which took my breath away. I worked with de Gournay to capture some of the details in the wallpaper.”
PRETTY IN PINK
“Different levels of light are important in making a romantic bedroom, and reading lights inside the bed help those like me with failing eyesight.” The custom lampshades throughout the room are a signature of Cathy’s work. “I’ll often line them with a pale pink. It makes women prettier, men more handsome, and the room glow.”
HAVE A SEAT
Cathy created an intimate seating area in front of the Chesneys mantel, layering pattern and texture with wicker chairs and inlaid furniture. “Antique textiles on pillows, the panel sewn on the ottoman, and the vintage rug give the room some history.”
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“We all have things we’re naturally drawn to, but I never want to have a ‘look.’ I love putting time and thought into finding special pieces and creating the kinds of details that not only make a room unique, but also true to the person who lives in it.”
JULIE DODSON
PRIMARY BATH, HER DRESSING ROOM, AND ADJOINING EAST GALLERY
FLORAL DESIGN PARTIES TO DIE FOR
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“I envision a woman who loves designer clothes like Valentino and Dior
puts things
her own
SPONSORS CLARENCE HOUSE • FROMENTAL • KINGDOM WOODWORKS • KRAVET • MATOUK • REPLACEMENTS, LTD. • THE RUG COMPANY • SAPELO SKIN CARE • THE SHADE STORE • SHERLE WAGNER INTERNATIONAL • TEMMER • U-LINE • UNIVERSAL FURNITURE • VISUAL COMFORT & CO. • WATERWORKS
but
together in
way.”
TAKE A SEAT
Julie incorporated window seats, elegant chairs, and occasional tables from Universal Furniture to ensure the owner will spend leisurely time with a cup of tea or browse the morning news before planning her outfit of the day. “Another key component of the space is the three-way mirror (preceding pages) so that when she’s finished dressing, she can look from every angle.” The wallpaper on the ceiling creates movement, as does the floor covering from The Rug Company.
Julie Dodson’s Point of View
WAKE-UP CALL
“The hall from the garage will be a regular entry point for the homeowners, so I didn’t want the space to feel like it had been left behind. The Fromental wallpaper gives it glamour. It’s the spot to make coffee or keep water in the refrigerator so you don’t have to run to the kitchen at 2:00 a.m.” In a curved niche outside the closet (preceding page), Julie paper-backed a geometric black fabric and edged it with pink grosgrain trim and nailheads.”
BATHING BEAUTY
“In the primary bath, the dark flooring with white marble insets that
designed with Temmer has a masculine moodiness, but everything surrounding it has a feminine vibe. I love creating that yin and yang.”
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we
“Classic elements mixed with just the right amount of edge and a dash of whimsy create the most inspiring spaces.”
DON EASTERLING & NINA LONG GENTLEMAN’S DRESSING ROOM AND ADJOINING POWDER ROOM
“It’s not easy to upstage Marianne Faithfull, Desmond Guinness, and Mick Jagger—or a Slim Aarons photograph for that matter—but this fabulous scenic wallpaper more than holds its own.”
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FLORAL DESIGN SUZANNE GRAVES OF GARDEN PARTY DESIGNS
SPONSORS
•
•
FROMENTAL • THE SHADE STORE • SHERLE
WAGNER
INTERNATIONAL • TEMMER • VISUAL COMFORT & CO.
WATERWORKS
Don Easterling and Nina Long’s Point of View
“Design isn’t about perfection, nor does it always have to be so serious. We believe all rooms need patina and a little whimsy thrown in to take off the edge.”
HANDS ON
STAR TURN
Preceding pages: “We love that this Fromental wallpaper, with its birds of prey and ochre and brown tones, is bolder and more masculine than a lot of chinoiserie designs.” The duo designed cabinetry lacquered in a rich burnt caramel color and created an arch to highlight an inlaid chest.
The dressing room has a stateliness that suggests a valet from Downton Abbey could appear at any moment, but the man of the house has everything needed to be self-sufficient. We envision this will be a room he’ll spend time in beyond just getting ready for the day. Open shelves provide an opportunity to display collections of his favorite things.
TAKE NOTE
Tucked within the space, a powder room features a custom marble vanity by Temmer and unlacquered brass fittings from Waterworks. “The room is small and we didn’t want to overpower it.” A globe lantern and antique mirror lead the eye up.
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ASHLEY WHITTAKER
SCREENED PORCH
FLORAL DESIGN
KEITH ROBINSON OF GLORIOSA DESIGN
“I want this to be a true extension of the house. A shaded porch is so appealing in the summer, and having a fireplace makes the room usable year-round.”
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Ashley Whittaker’s Point of View
KEY ELEMENT
Striped shades made by The Shade Store have a dentil molding detail and evoke tent awnings. “I used the same fabric to line the back side so that the view from the garden toward the house will be equally pretty.”
WORTH A CLOSER LOOK
The designer painted the inside of pendant lights from Currey & Company a haint blue, traditionally used on Southern porch ceilings. Ashley also believes that no porch should be without potted plants. “At the end of a hectic day, you’ll find me with watering can in hand. Container gardening makes me happy.”
ON BALANCING STYLE WITH PRACTICALITY
The designer gave interior fabrics a waterproof treatment and used teak and woven furniture that weathers well. “Even if things eventually show a little wear and tear, that’s part of the charm of a well-loved room.”
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“I love rooms where you can put your feet up, set your drink down, and have fun.”
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“My goal was to bring softness and femininity to the order of a Regency-style garden. This wasn’t the moment for large banana-leaf prints or neon color.”
flowermag.com | 77 | FLOWER SHOWHOUSE SPONSORS BEVOLO GAS & ELECTRIC LIGHTS • CENTURY FURNITURE • MATOUK • REPLACEMENTS, LTD. • THIBAUT
GRIFFIN OUTDOOR TERRACE AND POOL DECK FLORAL DESIGN ATLANTA PLANTERS AND CANAAN MARSHALL DESIGNS
ELAINE
Elaine Griffin’s Point of View
HOW THE DESIGNER MAKES A SPLASH
Elaine monogrammed scalloped bathmats by Matouk to use as shams on oversize pool loungers. “The personalization is unexpected outside, and the terry cloth makes the luxury practical.” The bouclé on the loungers is both comfortable and chic. “It’s like taking a nap on a Chanel suit.” Bevolo lanterns provide ambience for an after-sunset dip.
PLOT FOR PALETTE AND PATTERN
OUTDOOR LIVING
Elaine gave principles of indoor decorating a fresh-air spin by creating distinct zones, including living area (preceding pages), recreation area (poolside), and dining space. She surrounded a large concrete dining table with metal chairs, all by Century Furniture, and collaborated with floral designer Canaan Marshall on a setting she envisioned for clients celebrating a fourth anniversary, often symbolized with flowers and fruit.
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“When working with a landscape ‘starchitect’ like John Howard, my role is to complement, not compete, with the environment.” Here, quiet greens, ivories, and apricots relate to nature; stripes repeat in different scales. Fabrics by Thibaut.
“Exuberance doesn’t have to be loud. You can make bold statements with a whisper.”
JARED HUGHES
THREE-STORY STAIRWELL AND ADJOINING LANDINGS
DESIGN MISS MILLY’S EVENT RENTALS, FLORALS, & DESIGN
“I’ve spent a lot of time in England and have been fortunate to experience firsthand the details and design work in its stately houses. The Regency-style architecture was the jumping-off point for my inspiration.”
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FLORAL
SPONSORS
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
BALLARD DESIGNS
CURREY & COMPANY
DOMINGUE ARCHITECTURAL FINISHES • FABRICUT
GRACIE
HANCOCK & MOORE
THE RUG COMPANY
VISUAL COMFORT & CO.
Jared Hughes’ Point of View
MIX MASTER
In the curve of the stairwell, the designer hung art from a brass picture railing to create a salon-style look. “Most of the pieces are from my personal collection. It’s much more interesting when you combine different styles and periods. Mixing antique oil paintings with contemporary art creates the right amount of tension.”
STAIR DOWN
“I’ve been obsessed with this pattern from The Rug Company for a long time. I use a lot of animal-print runners because they’re so forgiving. These leopards appear to crawl up the stairs— the design is both quirky and classic.” Jared adds that the brass handrail will only get more beautiful with age.
DESIGN DETAILS
Jared used an English hand-blocked chintz designed in 1859 by Jean Monro with collections of Grand-Tour objects throughout the upper-level landing (seen here and preceding pages). Portieres leading into the bedrooms’ vestibules feature fabric by Vervain. Jared painted the shades for Visual Comfort sconces in green and red for additional strokes of color.
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“Having a collected feel evokes a sense of timelessness that will always rise above trends and be in good taste.”
| 84 | FLOWER January•February 2023 SPONSORS CURREY & COMPANY • DOMINGUE ARCHITECTURAL FINISHES • FROMENTAL • KINGDOM WOODWORKS • LEE INDUSTRIES • MATOUK • SAPELO SKIN CARE • THE SHADE STORE • SHERLE WAGNER INTERNATIONAL • TEMMER • WATERWORKS
SECOND-STORY
TAMMY CONNOR
BEDROOM AND EN SUITE FLORAL DESIGN HOLLY BRYAN DESIGN
“We imagined a girl with a passion for The Secret Garden and then brought that idea to life.”
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Tammy Connor’s Point of View
IN THE PINK
Tammy pulled the pink from the bedroom into the bath with a lime wash paint finish in “Papillon” by Domingue. The vanity is by Kingdom Woodworks.
ONE TO GROW ON
“Our starting point was a Fromental wallpaper that feels fresh and modern with flowers and trees in relief. Although we had a young girl in mind, this space will easily grow along with her and can become a guest room later. The olive green and dusty pink combination is a sophisticated spin on a pink-and-green palette, and we layered in antiques and materials with character that speak to a sense of longevity.” A small bird painting by SCAD alumna Kathleen Buys hangs off-center over the LEE Industries headboard.
SIDE NOTE
A lacquered green desk serves as one of the bedside tables. “It’s perfect for homework or as a spot for a young girl to draw things she has seen while out playing in the garden.” The woven water hyacinth lamp is by Currey & Company.
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“In both design and life, I try not to subscribe to something just because everyone else is doing it. Hopefully this translates into authentic interiors that reflect the architecture and setting, as well as the family’s lifestyle.”
| 88 | FLOWER January•February 2023 SPONSORS FINE PAINTS OF EUROPE • KINGDOM WOODWORKS • MATOUK • SHERLE WAGNER INTERNATIONAL • TEMMER • VISUAL COMFORT & CO. • WATERWORKS BETH WEBB & TRISTAN HARSTAN SECOND-STORY BEDROOM AND EN SUITE FLORAL DESIGN HOLLY BRYAN DESIGN
want guests to feel like they’re having a luxurious, five-star-hotel experience in this suite.”
“We
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Beth Webb’s Point of View
BLUE NOTES
“I like to call this bedroom ‘Rhapsody in Blue.’ The 19th-century cabinet from Ainsworth-Noah that Tristan found in France and the Massimo Listri photograph of the Hermitage in St. Petersburg were the starting points for the palette,” says Beth. The “Prince Charles” bed from Rose Tarlow through Jerry Pair (preceding pages), piled with Matouk linens, invites relaxation. According to Beth, “A bedroom should feel sumptuous, elegant, and above all, comfortable.”
TRICKS OF THE TRADE
“The texture of the grasscloth on the walls is a beautiful contradiction to the high gloss of the ceiling,” Beth says. Tristan adds, “Drapery needs to be luxurious because it envelops the room. I pay a lot of attention to details such as lining the drapery with a heavy bump to create structure and also muffle sound.”
ON THE SURFACE
Atop an 18th-century commode, a 19th-century Italian bronze horse stands in front of a contemporary work by Atlanta artist Scott Ingram (who uses nail polishes in his creative process), and a Régence mirror. “Every surface tells its own little story, and this vignette is one of my favorites,” says Tristan.
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“An idea of home is visceral, but we can truly share it only when we make it tangible—when we see it, touch it, feel it. Only then do we know we’re home.”
| 92 | FLOWER January•February 2023 UPPER LEVEL
flowermag.com | 93 | FLOWER SHOWHOUSE SPONSORS DOMINGUE ARCHITECTURAL FINISHES • JONATHAN CHARLES • KINGDOM WOODWORKS • PIONEER LINENS • REPLACEMENTS, LTD. • THE RUG COMPANY • SAPELO SKIN CARE • THE SHADE STORE • SHERLE WAGNER INTERNATIONAL • TEMMER • THIBAUT • VISUAL COMFORT & CO. • WATERWORKS LISA MENDE SECOND-STORY BEDROOM AND EN SUITE FLORAL DESIGN MARY PINSON “I call this room ‘Betty’s Garden,’ an homage to my late aunt who loved flowers and collecting beautiful things. She taught me to do the same.”
Lisa Mende’s Point of View
DESIGN DETAIL
The trim on the leading edge of the curtains references back to the ceiling pattern, as well as to the scallops on the luxurious bedding from Pioneer Linens (preceding pages).
DREAM FACTOR
A Thibaut wallpaper mural, profuse with blooms, birds, and butterflies, envelops the room. “I also like to give the ‘fifth wall’ interest, and this was a perfect opportunity for a trellis wallpaper on the ceiling.” Lisa pays equal attention underfoot with a radiating carpet design from The Rug Company (preceding pages).
Blue-and-white porcelain from Replacements fills shelves in the Jonathan Charles bureau.
ALIGHT ON THIS
WELCOME IN
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Charlotte artist Stephen Wilson embroidered the headboard with flowers seen in the wall covering. Lisa pinned on embroidered butterflies for additional dimension.
In the vestibule, an exuberant mirror, silver vases filled with roses, and a cloche of butterflies speak to the lush environment that awaits.
“Surround yourself with the people and things you love, and you’ll always have reason to smile.”
MALLORY MATHISON GLENN
ROOM,
SUITE
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GRACIE • KINGDOM WOODWORKS • LEE JOFA • LILLIAN AUGUST FOR HICKORY WHITE • PIONEER LINENS • REPLACEMENTS, LTD. • THE SHADE STORE • SHERLE WAGNER INTERNATIONAL • TEMMER • THIBAUT • VISUAL COMFORT & CO. • WATERWORKS
SECOND-STORY STUDY, SITTING
AND EN
FLORAL DESIGN HELEN IZLAR AND LANE COURTS OF EAST PINE DESIGNS “My gilded garden began with the metallic scenic wallpaper. Given the room’s angled walls, it feels like being inside a faceted jewel.” SPONSORS
Mallory Mathison Glenn’s Point of View
BALANCING ACT
Although her design is unapologetically feminine, Mallory used contrasting materials like a chunky jute rug and dark woods to balance the Gracie wallpaper, dressmaker window treatments from The Shade Store, and tufted banquettes from Lillian August (previous pages). “I like the mix of those elements with the polished and pristine.” On a leisurely afternoon, who could pass up the rosé bar cart? “Love you Bunches and Miraval are two of my favorites.”
IN THE BATH
The adjacent bathroom features an airy interpretation of her rose, blue, and gold palette with Thibaut wallpaper, custom sconce shades, Sherle Wagner hardware, and Waterworks fixtures.
QUICK STUDY
Creativity runs in the designer’s DNA. An abstract painting by artist Monteigne Ray Mathison—who happens to be Mallory’s mother—incorporates all the colors of the room. The study’s check-draped daybed is ideal for stealing an afternoon nap. “When the door is closed, the rest of the family knows this is all about ‘me’ time.”
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“Homes should be joyful. Live what you love.”
FRAN KEENAN
TERRACE-LEVEL GYM WITH ADJOINING SPA
FLORAL DESIGN LUSH LIFE HOME & GARDEN
“I’ve taken the coldness out of what can often be a clinical-looking room and created a visually inspiring environment. Any motivation we can get while taking care of ourselves is vital.”
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SPONSORS DOMINGUE ARCHITECTURAL FINISHES • KINGDOM WOODWORKS • LEE INDUSTRIES • MATOUK • SHERLE WAGNER INTERNATIONAL • TEMMER • VISUAL COMFORT & CO. • WATERWORKS •
Fran Keenan’s Point of View
DESIGN EXERCISES
“We painted stripes on the floor at a 45-degree angle to infuse a little energy.” The designer pieced together vinyls to create a patchwork ottoman. “It’s practical—you can sit on it or use it to stretch muscle groups, and it’s ok if it gets damp.” Linen panels surround the room, adding softness and creating depth behind the art. A pair of sofas from LEE Industries in a cinnamon velvet (preceding pages) offer a place to lounge post-workout.
KEY ELEMENTS
LEAN IN
The designer threaded touches of cobalt throughout on upholstery trims, pillow details, and the ottoman. In addition to contemporary exercise equipment, Fran collected vintage medicine balls and weights. “I love finding worn and weathered things to layer in with modern functionality.”
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“Old breaks the mold. Incorporate antique and vintage things, and your house will never look like anyone else’s.”
Fran papered spa walls with reproductions of the Periodic Table. “It’s a wink toward wellness; we need elements like oxygen and magnesium to survive and thrive.” In a nod to her fashion background, she was inspired by a Rick Owens leather jacket for the valance leading to the bathroom area (preceding pages). “We draped four hides and left the edges raw so it didn’t feel precious.”
VANITY
PHOTO BY ROBERT PETERSON
TISH MILLS KIRK
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AND
DESIGNS
SPONSORS BEVOLO GAS & ELECTRIC LIGHTS • FABRICUT • GABBY • KINGDOM WOODWORKS • PIONEER LINENS • THE SHADE STORE • SHERLE WAGNER INTERNATIONAL • SUMMER CLASSICS • TEMMER • VISUAL COMFORT & CO. • WATERWORKS •
BEDROOM, EN SUITE, AND ADJOINING OUTDOOR TERRACE FLORAL DESIGN ATLANTA PLANTERS
CANAAN MARSHALL
“Guest rooms can be a transportive experience. Sleeping in this one feels like being on a luxury safari.”
Tish Mills Kirk’s Point of View
NATURAL CHOICE
Preceding pages: “The bedroom feels connected to the earth through the sepia, brown, and cream tones we used. I’m not usually this bold with wall coverings, but I fell in love when I saw a small swatch of this jungle print by Parete. I knew it would be a fun way to bring the outdoors in. Light and dark furniture pieces from Gabby echo the give and take of the room’s palette.”
CLIMB IN
“For the bed hangings (preceding pages), I used long panels of a Fabricut animal pattern that attach from the ceiling. They evoke the feeling of a glamorous tent.” A Samuel & Sons trim featuring beaded insects adds a sense of humor and surprise in the room.
TAKE IT OUTSIDE
“In the morning, guests can relax on the adjacent terrace with a cup of coffee before heading upstairs. The Summer Classics furniture is super comfortable.”
“
DREAMY DETAIL
The luxuriousness of these Pioneer Linen sheets is beyond belief, and the gold embroidery adds even more elegance.”
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“We’re living through another Roaring ‘20s of design. Embrace it, take some chances, and have fun.”
RAY BOOTH
TERRACE-LEVEL FAMILY ROOM
FLORAL
DESIGN KEITH ROBINSON OF GLORIOSA DESIGN
“A series of convex mirrors in different scales creates an installation that echoes the porthole windows. They also bounce light around, animating the space.”
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SPONSORS DOMINGUE ARCHITECTURAL FINISHES • HICKORY CHAIR • THE SHADE STORE • SHERLE WAGNER INTERNATIONAL • VISUAL COMFORT & CO. •
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Ray Booth’s Point of View
CIRCLE THIS
Previous pages: “I arranged a pair of sectional sofas from my furniture line for Hickory Chair in an L-shape and then interrupted the bulk of the back with an ottoman in between. It’s all deep-seated and incredibly comfortable for movie-watching.” Below, Ray continues the circular play with a hand-blown glass light fixture from John Pomp through R. Hughes “that looks like a mobile suspended from the ceiling.” The table spins down to 18 inches and up to 22 inches, “which gives a little diversity for height and use.”
GAME POINT
Ray saw the other side of the room as the ideal spot for a game table. “I surrounded my table with a curved banquette and vintage chairs. The upholstered screen reaches its arms out to gather the furniture and is also the perfect place to hang the painting by David Kidd.”
MAKING HIS CASE
A buffet with square-pleated front, another of Booth’s own furniture designs, provides ample storage as well as a surface for decorative objects and a drinks tray.
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“The real byproduct of good design is not that something is beautiful but that it evokes emotion and feeling.”
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“I bucked the trend of the masculine tones and dark fabrics often used in these kinds of spaces, and embraced a more elegant and fashion-forward aesthetic.” SPONSORS BALLARD DESIGNS • FINE PAINTS OF EUROPE • GRACIE • HANCOCK & MOORE • KRAVET • MAITLAND-SMITH • MARVEL • REPLACEMENTS, LTD. • THE RUG COMPANY • SHERLE WAGNER INTERNATIONAL • TEMMER • U-LINE • VISUAL COMFORT & CO. • WATERWORKS •
COREY DAMEN JENKINS SECRET SPEAKEASY, WINE CELLAR, AND ADJOINING MORNING BAR FLORAL DESIGN KIRK WHITFIELD
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Corey Damen Jenkin’s Point of View
SITTING PRETTY
Antique art juxtaposes with a contemporary painting by Atlanta artist Shanequa Gay. Corey used Kravet fabrics—several of his own design—on the built-in banquette cushions and pillows. The octagonal tables and stools are from Maitland-Smith.
TRICK OF THE TRADE
Mirrors, reflective finishes, and organic motifs such as the Gracie wallpaper visually defy the feeling of a closed-in, windowless room. “Going light and ethereal achieves a ‘Jedi mind trick’ that makes the spaces feel taller and airy and invites people in.” Shades of pink weave from the morning bar through to the wine cellar, painted insets of the coffered ceiling (preceding pages), and chairs by Hancock & Moore.
WORTH A CLOSER LOOK
“There’s so much sculptural geometry, from the oval insets in the speakeasy to the intricate and exacting shelving in the wine room [preceding pages].” Sculpture also comes into play in the morning bar’s fixtures from Sherle Wagner.
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“Life is too short to live in a beige box!”
| 116 | FLOWER January•February 2023 NELLIE HOWARD OSSI TERRACE-LEVEL POWDER ROOM FLORAL DESIGN MARY PINSON SPONSORS KINGDOM WOODWORKS • PIONEER LINENS • SHERLE WAGNER INTERNATIONAL • TEMMER • VISUAL COMFORT & CO. • WATERWORKS •
Nellie
Howard Ossi’s Point of View
ALWAYS LOOK UP
DESIGN DETAILS
“I envisioned a collaboration between sea and sky, with shagreen paper on the walls and a wallpaper of birds in flight on the ceiling.” Embroidered guest towels named Kohola (which means coral in Hawaiian) from Pioneer Linens continue the concept. Hardware is by Waterworks. Adjacent page: “I found a mirror with rippled detailing that matches the wall color perfectly and had custom sconce shades made from sheer fabrics. The pink-andgreen veining in the countertop pops nicely with the teal on the walls.”
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“Surround yourself with beautiful things, and you’ll never go wrong.”
“The wallpaper on the ceiling draws the eye up, and Aerin Lauder’s plaster fixture from Visual Comfort casts a beautiful pattern of light around the room.”
FLOWER SHOWHOUSE FLOOR PLANS
MAIN LEVEL
1
MICHELLE NUSSBAUMER
Entrance Hall and Adjoining Powder Room 2
SUZANNE KASLER The Salon 3
BARRY DIXON Library 4
ALEXA HAMPTON Dining Room 5
MELANIE MILLNER
Catering Kitchen and Butler’s Pantry 6
BUNNY WILLIAMS
Cutting Room, Powder Room, and Adjoining West Gallery 7
CATHY KINCAID Primary Bedroom 8
JULIE DODSON
Primary Bath, Her Dressing Room, and Adjoining East Gallery 9
DON EASTERLING & NINA LONG
Gentleman’s Dressing Room and Adjoining Powder Room 10
ASHLEY WHITTAKER
Screened Porch
BACK OF HOUSE
OUTDOOR
TERRACE AND POOL DECK
ELAINE GRIFFIN
Outdoor Terrace and Pool Deck
FRONT OF HOUSE
2 1 4 5 6 7 9 8 10 3
| 118 | FLOWER January•February 2023
UPPER LEVEL
1
JARED HUGHES
Three-Story Stairwell and Adjoining Landings 2
TAMMY CONNOR Bedroom and En Suite 3
BETH WEBB & TRISTAN HARSTAN Bedroom and En Suite 4
LISA MENDE Bedroom and En Suite 5
MALLORY MATHISON GLENN Study, Sitting Room, and En Suite
TERRACE LEVEL
1
FRAN KEENAN
Gym with Adjoining Spa 2
TISH MILLS
Bedroom, En Suite, and Adjoining Outdoor Terrace 3
RAY BOOTH Family Room 4
COREY DAMEN JENKINS Secret Speakeasy, Wine Cellar, and Adjoining Morning Bar 5
NELLIE HOWARD OSSI Powder Room
flowermag.com | 119 | FLOWER SHOWHOUSE
1 2 4 3 3 2 1 5 4 5
THANK YOU
The FLOWER Showhouse would not be complete without the incredible support of so many marquee brands and floral designers. It is with deep gratitude that we thank the following:
FLORAL DESIGNERS: Atlanta Planters; Canaan Marshall Designs; East Pine Designs; Garden Party Designs; Gloriosa Design; Holly Bryan Floral Design; Kappi Naftel; Kirk Whitfield; Lush Life Home & Garden; M. Delia Designs; Mary Pinson; Michal Evans Flora & Event Design; Miss Milly’s Event Rentals, Florals, & Design; Parties to Die For; Robert Long Flora & Event Design; and Wildflower Designs
| 120 | FLOWER January•February 2023
Sources
MICHELLE
NUSSBAUMER
Entrance Hall and Adjoining Powder Room; Page 36
ACCESSORIES
Ballard Designs
Chelsea House Mainly Baskets Maitland-Smith
ART
Wendover Art Group
CABINETRY Kingdom Woodworks COUNTERTOP Temmer
FABRICS Clarence House Fabricut Thibaut
FAUCETS/FIXTURES
Waterworks
FLOOR COVERINGS
The Rug Company
FURNITURE
Chelsea House HARDWARE Sherle Wagner International Modern Matter
LIGHTING Visual Comfort & Co. LINENS Matouk
PAINT
Domingue Architectural Finishes Fine Paints of Europe
WALLPAPER Paul Montgomery
WINDOW TREATMENTS
The Shade Store
SUZANNE KASLER
The Salon; Page 40
ACCESSORIES
Ainsworth-Noah
BK Antiques Keith ETC.
APPLIANCES
La Cornue
Viking ART
Alan Avery Gallery Pryor Fine Art
CABINETRY Kingdom Woodworks COUNTERTOP Temmer
FABRICS Chelsea Textiles Douglass Workroom Fortuny Houles Sunsilks
FAUCETS/FIXTURES
Waterworks
FURNITURE Bungalow Classic Hickory Chair Huff Harrington Loft Antiques Paris Flea Market HARDWARE Armac Martin Sherle Wagner International LIGHTING Paris Flea Market MANTEL Chesneys PAINT Benjamin Moore Domingue Architectural Finishes WALLPAPER Phillip Jeffries
WINDOW TREATMENTS Willard Pitt Curtain Makers
BARRY DIXON Library; Page 44 ANTIQUES Bell & Preston Randall Tysinger
ACCESSORIES
Arteriors
Kelly Metalworks Kinsey Marable Iatesta Studio R. Hughes Replacements, LTD.
FABRICS Daniel Guross Decor de Paris Fortuny Northcroft Fabrics Samuel & Sons Stroheim
Who Did It & Where To Get It
TylerGraphic Vervain Zak+Fox
FLOOR COVERINGS Kyle Bunting
FURNITURE Arteriors Cox London Julian Chichester Tomlinson Companies
HARDWARE Sherle Wagner International
LIGHTING
Visual Comfort & Co. Currey & Company
MANTEL Chesneys
PAINT
Fine Paints of Europe
WALLPAPER Phillip Jeffries
WINDOW TREATMENTS The Shade Store
ALEXA HAMPTON Dining Room; Page 48 ANTIQUES
English Accent Antiques William Word Antiques ART Celia Rogge Fine Arts Mark D’Alessio FABRICS Clarence House Kravet Samuel & Sons
FLOOR COVERINGS Nazmiyal Collection FURNITURE Theodore Alexander HARDWARE Sherle Wagner International
LIGHTING Broome Lampshades Newport Lamp & Shade Company
Visual Comfort & Co.
MANTEL Chesneys PAINT Benjamin Moore
TABLETOP
La Gallina Matta Replacements, LTD. WALLPAPER Gracie
WINDOW TREATMENTS The Shade Store
MELANIE MILLNER
Catering Kitchen and Butler’s Pantry; Page 52
APPLIANCES
Viking
ART Tew Galleries CABINETRY Kingdom Woodworks COUNTERTOP Marmi Natural Stone FABRICS Pierre Frey
FAUCETS/FIXTURES
Waterworks FINE CHINA fête
FLOOR COVERINGS Stark Carpet HARDWARE Kingdom Woodworks Sherle Wagner International
LIGHTING Visual Comfort & Co.
PAINT Benjamin Moore Domingue Architectural Finishes WALLPAPER Holly Hunt
WINDOW TREATMENTS Douglass Workroom
BUNNY WILLIAMS
Cutting Room, Powder Room, and Adjoining West Gallery; Page 56
ANTIQUES
A. Tyner Antiques
Bunny Williams Home
ACCESSORIES
Ballard Designs
Bunny Williams Home
ART
Ballard Designs Bunny Williams Home John Funt
CABINETRY Kingdom Woodworks COUNTERTOPS Francois & Co.
FAUCETS/FIXTURES
Waterworks
FLOORING Temmer
FURNITURE Ballard Designs HARDWARE Sherle Wagner International
LIGHTING Currey & Company
PAINT Benjamin Moore Domingue Architectural Finishes
Fine Paints of Europe WALLPAPER Lee Jofa Thibaut
CATHY KINCAID
Primary Bedroom; Page 60
ACCESSORIES
Ainsworth-Noah Antique Textiles Collections
Fabulous Things, Ltd. Madre Dallas Replacements, LTD. FABRICS Namay Samay through Wells Abbott
FLOOR COVERINGS
Doris Leslie Blau Stark Carpet FURNITURE Bonacina Peck & Company Gerald Bland
HARDWARE Sherle Wagner International
LIGHTING
Ainsworth-Noah John Boone Christopher Spitzmiller, Inc. The Lamp Shoppe Edgar Reeves
VOLUME 17, ISSUE 1. Flower magazine, ISSN 1941-4714, is a bimonthly publication of Peony Publishing, LLC, located at 3020 Pump House Road, Birmingham, AL 35243. Periodicals postage is paid at Birmingham, AL, and additional mailing offices. Postmaster: Send address changes to Flower magazine, P.O. Box 8538, Big Sandy, TX 75755. For subscription inquiries and customer service, please call 877.400.3074. All unsolicited materials will not be returned. Printed in the U.S.A.
flowermag.com | 123 |
For additional information go to flowermag.com/showhouse
LINENS
Matouk MANTEL Chesneys PAINTS Benjamin Moore Milesi
WALLPAPER de Gournay Conner Wallcovering
WORKROOMS
Amazing Custom Upholstery Interior Design Services
JULIE DODSON
Primary Bath, Her Dressing Room, and Adjoining East Gallery; Page 64
ANTIQUES
A. Tyner Antiques
Foxglove Antiques Provenance Antiques Renouveau Antiques William Word Antiques
ACCESSORIES
Rejunevation Replacements, LTD. Sapelo Skin Care
APPLIANCES
U-Line
ART
Dimmitt Art Gallery Longoria Collection
CABINETRY Kingdom Woodworks COUNTERTOP Temmer
FABRICS Clarence House Fortuny Fromental Holland & Sherry Kravet Madeaux Nobilis Pindler Scalamandre Schumacher
FAUCETS/FIXTURES
Waterworks
FLOOR COVERINGS
The Rug Company
FURNITURE The Joseph Company Universal Furniture
HARDWARE
Fixtures & Fittings
Sherle Wagner International
LIGHTING
Ainsworth-Noah Edgar Reeves Vaughan Visual Comfort & Co.
LINENS Matouk Lettrefina
WALLPAPER
Fromental Porter Teleo
WINDOW TREATMENTS
Heines Custom Draperies The Shade Store
DON EASTERLING & NINA LONG
Gentleman’s Dressing Room and Adjoining Powder Room; Page 68
ACCESSORIES
Ainsworth-Noah Edgar Reeves Foxglove Antiques Mathews Furniture + Design Peachtree Battle Antiques Scott Antique Markets William Word Antiques COUNTERTOP Temmer
FABRICS Jerry Pair Schumacher Travis & Company
FAUCETS/FIXTURES
Waterworks
FLOOR COVERINGS Moattar
FURNITURE Mathews Furniture + Design HARDWARE
Matthew Quinn Collection Sherle Wagner international Urban Archaeology
LIGHTING Jamb London John Rosselli
Visual Comfort & Co.
PAINT Milesi
WALLPAPER
Fromental
WINDOW TREATMENTS The Shade Store
ASHLEY WHITTAKER
Screened Porch; Page 72
ACCESSORIES
Bungalow Classic Creel and Gow
Christopher Spitzmiller, Inc.
LIGHTING
Bevolo Gas & Electric Lights Currey & Company
FABRICS Bennison Namay Samay Perennials Zina Studios
FLOOR COVERINGS
L&M Carpets Jamie Lanford, Inc.
FURNITURE David Sutherland Munder Skiles
RT Facts
The Lacquer Company HARDWARE Sherle Wagner International WINDOW TREATMENTS The Shade Store
WORKROOMS Westside Custom Upholstery
ELAINE GRIFFIN
Outdoor Terrace and Pool Deck; Page 76
ACCESSORIES
Amanda Lindroth FABRICS Thibaut
FLOOR COVERINGS Doris Leslie Blau NY FURNITURE Century Furniture
LIGHTING
Bevolo Gas & Electric Lights Zafferano America
LINENS Matouk
TABLETOP Juliska Replacements, LTD.
JARED HUGHES
Three-Story Stairwell and Adjoining Landings; Page 80
ANTIQUES
Loft Antiques
William Word Antiques
ACCESSORIES
Ballard Designs Currey & Company
ART Jean Glenn
Michael Dines
Stephen Shon Travis & Company William McClure
FABRICS
Decortex, Jean Monro, Stroheim, and Vervain through Fabricut
FLOOR COVERINGS
The Rug Company FURNITURE Hancock & Moore HARDWARE Byron & Byron through Fabricut
LIGHTING
Christopher Spitzmiller, Inc. Edgar Reeves Hector Finch Visual Comfort & Co.
PAINT Benjamin Moore Domingue Architectural Finishes
WALLPAPER Gracie
Jean Monro through Fabricut
TAMMY CONNOR
Second-Story Bedroom and En Suite; Page 84
ACCESSORIES
Sapelo Skin Care
ANTIQUES English Accent Antiques Foxglove Antiques William Word Antiques ART
Alan Avery Art Company Huff Harrington SCAD Art Sales CABINETRY Kingdom Woodworks COUNTERTOP Temmer
FAUCETS/FIXTURES Waterworks
FLOOR COVERINGS
Keivan Woven Arts
FURNITURE The Lacquer Company LEE Industries
HARDWARE Sherle Wagner International
LIGHTING Currey & Company Edgar Reeves
Nancy Johnson Algire LINENS Matouk
PAINT Benjamin Moore Domingue Architectural Finishes
WALLPAPER Fromental WINDOW TREATMENTS The Shade Store
BETH WEBB & TRISTAN HARSTAN Second-Story Bedroom and En Suite; Page 88
ANTIQUES Ainsworth-Noah
ART Scott Ingram CABINETRY Kingdom Woodworks COUNTERTOP Temmer
FABRICS B. Mori* Jasper Fabrics* Rose Cumming* Samuel & Sons*
FAUCETS/FIXTURES Waterworks
FLOOR COVERINGS Keivan Woven Arts
FURNITURE
Allan Knight* Dessin Fournir* Jerry Pair Nancy Corzine Rose Tarlow
HARDWARE Iron Studio Sherle Wagner International
LIGHTING Edgar Reeves Visual Comfort & Co. LINENS Matouk
PAINT Benjamin Moore Fine Paints of Europe WALLPAPER Ainsworth-Noah
WINDOW TREATMENTS
Willard Pitt Curtain Makers *available through Ainsworth-Noah
LISA MENDE
Second-Story Bedroom and En Suite; Page 92
ANTIQUES William Word Antiques
ACCESSORIES Cruel Mountain Edgar Reeves International Shades
| 124 | FLOWER January•February 2023
DID IT & WHERE TO GET IT For additional information
to flowermag.com/showhouse
WHO
go
Little Design Co.
Nancy Price Curated Replacements, LTD. Sapelo Skin Care Stephen Wilson Studio
ART
Alexis Walter Dawn Nakamura Interiors Stephen Wilson Studio
CABINETRY Kingdom Woodworks COUNTERTOP Temmer
FABRICS Thibaut
FAUCETS/FIXTURES
Waterworks
FLOOR COVERINGS
English Village Lane The Rug Company
FURNITURE Jonathan Charles River & Bord
HARDWARE Sherle Wagner International LIGHTING
Louise Gaskill Lighting Visual Comfort & Co.
LINENS Pioneer Linens
PAINT Benjamin Moore Domingue Architectural Finishes WALLPAPER Thibaut
WINDOW TREATMENTS
The Shade Store
WORKROOMS
JD Stanley Patterson Custom Workroom
MALLORY
MATHISON GLENN
Second-Story Study, Sitting Room, and En Suite; Page 96
ACCESSORIES
Fleur Home Mirror Home Replacements, LTD.
ANTIQUES
William Word Antiques
ART Gregg Irby Huff Harrington
CABINETRY Kingdom Woodworks COUNTERTOP Temmer FABRICS Cowtan & Tout Lee Jofa Thibaut
FAUCETS/FIXTURES
Waterworks
FLOOR COVERINGS Underfoot
FURNITURE
Lillian August for Hickory White HARDWARE Sherle Wagner International LIGHTING Edgar Reeves Visual Comfort & Co.
LINENS Pioneer Linens PAINT Benjamin Moore Milesi WALLPAPER Gracie Thibaut
WINDOW TREATMENTS
The Shade Store WORKROOMS Charlene Tong Checks & Valances
FRAN KEENAN
Terrace-Level Gym with Adjoining Spa; Page 100
ACCESSORIES
Bala Chairish Mary & Wilma Unique Black Sheep
ANTIQUES
Unique Black Sheep ART
Alan Taylor Jeffries
Amy Stone
Anne Darby Parker Brent Warr Emily Morgan Brown Heidi Harner
CABINETRY Kingdom Woodworks COUNTERTOPS Temmer
FABRICS Pierre Frey Samuel & Sons Schumacher
FAUCETS/FIXTURES
Waterworks
FURNITURE LEE Industries
GALLERIES Co-Op Art Atlanta Design Supply Gregg Irby HARDWARE Nest Studio Sherle Wagner International LIGHTING Chairish Visual Comfort & Co. LINENS Matouk PAINT Benjamin Moore Domingue Architectural Finishes Milesi
TISH MILLS KIRK Bedroom, En Suite, and Adjoining Outdoor Terrace; Page 104 ART Huff Harrington CABINETRY Kingdom Woodworks COUNTERTOP Temmer FABRICS Fabricut Interlude London Samuel & Sons The Vale London
FAUCETS/FIXTURES Waterworks
FLOOR COVERINGS Moattar Summer Classics FURNITURE Baker Furniture Gabby Showroom 58 Summer Classics HARDWARE Sherle Wagner International
LIGHTING
Bevolo Gas & Electric Lights Huff Harrington Visual Comfort & Co.
LINENS Pioneer Linens PAINT Benjamin Moore WALLPAPER Parete
WINDOW TREATMENTS
The Shade Store
WORKROOMS
The Drapery Room
RAY BOOTH Terrace-Level Family Room; Page 108
ANTIQUES
A. Tyner Antiques Holland MacRae Robuck
ACCESSORIES Blake Weeks R. Hughes ART
David Kidd
FABRICS Ainsworth-Noah Arabel Fabrics Schumacher
The Romo Group
FLOOR COVERINGS Colonial Mills Marc Phillips FURNITURE Paul Plus Baker Furniture Constantini Hickory Chair HARDWARE Sherle Wagner International LIGHTING Arteriors
John Pomp through R. Hughes Visual Comfort & Co.
PAINT Benjamin Moore Domingue Architectural Finishes WALLPAPER Phillip Jeffries
WINDOW TREATMENTS
The Shade Store
WORKROOMS
Blue Door Framing Douglass Workroom
COREY
DAMEN JENKINS
Secret Speakeasy, Wine Cellar, and Adjoining Morning Bar; Page 112
ANTIQUES
William Word Antiques
ACCESSORIES Ballard Designs Replacements, LTD.
APPLIANCES Marvel U-Line
ART CO-OP Art Atlanta
COUNTERTOPS Temmer FABRICS Kravet
FAUCETS/FIXTURES Sherle Wagner International Waterworks
FLOOR COVERINGS The Rug Company
FURNITURE Hancock & Moore Maitland-Smith OW Seating
HARDWARE Sherle Wagner International LIGHTING Visual Comfort & Co.
PAINTS Benjamin Moore Fine Paints of Europe
WALLPAPER Gracie
NELLIE
HOWARD OSSI Terrace-Level Powder Room; Page 116
ACCESSORIES
Anali Kohola Made Goods CABINETRY Kingdom Woodworks COUNTERTOP Temmer FABRICS Cowtan & Tout
FAUCETS/FIXTURES Waterworks
FLOOR COVERING Moattar
HARDWARE Sherle Wagner International Waterworks
LIGHTING Lux Lampshades Visual Comfort & Co.
LINENS Pioneer Linens
PAINT Benjamin Moore
WALLPAPER Cowtan & Tout Jane Churchill
| 126 | FLOWER January•February 2023
DID IT & WHERE TO GET IT For additional information go to flowermag.com/showhouse
WHO
A Perfect Pairing
AT THE FLOWER SHOWHOUSE, THE CLASSIC STYLE OF THESE ANTIQUE COPPER LANTERNS COMPLEMENTS THE GRACEFUL STRENGTH OF THE HOME’S REGENCY ARCHITECTURE.
Produced and styled by Amanda Smith Fowler • Photography by David Hillegas
“Lighting is like jewelry; it’s one of the most important elements of architecture. Our objective is to be historically accurate in both scale and style,” says Drew Bevolo, third-generation owner of Bevolo Gas & Electric Lights. “Regency architecture pre-dates lighting fixtures on houses. By using antique copper, the material on original gas streetlights in London, we can integrate an architecturally neutral cohesion with our lanterns. At dusk, the lanterns add a subtle glow, creating warmth and giving a sense of space to their surroundings.”
THE FRENCH QUARTER ORIGINAL BRACKET
(flanking the doors)
This Bevolo original was designed in the 1940s by world-renowned architect A. Hays Town and company founder Andrew Bevolo, Sr.
GOVERNOR POOL HOUSE LANTERNS IN THREE SIZES
(on stoop and steps)
Ideal for use in your outdoor living spaces, these lanterns are designed to hold large candles for more illumination.
All of the above provided through partnership with Bevolo Gas & Electric Lights, 504.522.9485, bevolo.com
| 128 | FLOWER January•February 2023 Outdoor Style