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"#$%&'()%&) )))))))"*$%&'( A pair of famed designers trade the rat race for a Badger state of mind by KATIE FORAN-McHALE // photos by EVAN BENNER

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enture one block past the charming, whimsical Williamson Street on Madison’s east side and you’ll find a less lively one. With an empty field, dying grass and a view limited to an unsightly building and train tracks, the 1200 block of East Wilson Street is aesthetically jarring. But tucked away in this block are two renowned designers who traded in their chic studio in Manhattan for a storefront overlooking an ugly white building. Rick Shaver and Lee Melahn have been featured in !e New York Times, House Beautiful, Elle Décor, O at Home, Veranda and New York Spaces, to name a few. You can even find a Shaver Melahn Studios desk and bed in the private residence of Bill and Hillary Clinton. After nearly 30 years of establishing a stellar reputation in one of the biggest design capitals of the world, the two are just getting their feet wet in a mid-sized Midwestern city. “We are still the new kids on the block,” Melahn said.

EAST COAST TO EAST WILSON

Shaver and Melahn made names for themselves in New York City but had smaller suburban upbringings. “Lee was born in Madison, I was born in a small town in Georgia,” Shaver said, with a hint of a Southern drawl. “It is not like we grew up on Park Avenue.” But despite their familiarity with the lifestyle of smaller communities, Shaver and Melahn had concerns about making the switch from the Big Apple to the Badger State. “When you work in New York, there is a level of sophistication that you get to with every client, even if the client is spending the bare minimum,” Shaver said. “And we didn’t know what to expect here.” In Manhattan, all the necessities — food, entertainment, supplies for design — were either mere blocks away or easily attainable by a short subway ride. Here, in Madison, car rides slow down their daily lives, as well as their accessibility to supplies. Melahn often has to drive to Chicago — three hours from Madison — for fabric. Even with a new clientele, Shaver and Melahn still know what they want to accomplish in their designs — individualized attention

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11/21/11 10:22 AM


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