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The Art of Butchery Lives On at Palmer’s perfectly Frenched racks of lamb, regal standing rib roasts, succulent, bone-in, Berkshire pork roasts... the meats sold at Palmer’s Market represent more than just supreme quality. The butcher shop here is steeped in a family tradition that dates back 100 years.
P
rofessional butchery has become all but a lost art, but through five generations, the Palmer family has maintained this rich trade and its traditions at their family-owned, European style marketplace. Their roots in an industry that continually names Palmers as the best in the business trace back to a home-based butcher shop run by great-great grandfather Rocco in The Bronx in the early 1900s. “We’ve always prided ourselves on having master butchers,” said Greg Palmer, co-owner, who oversees the meat department. “We sell prime meat here, but it needs to be prepared, trimmed,
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and displayed properly and we have butchers with the expertise.” Greg’s late uncle, Rocky Palmer, learned the trade growing up in the store, along with his two brothers, and after graduating from Northeastern, came home and took over the department. Greg’s cousin, Cindy, remembers, “My father grew up learning to butcher from my grandfather and great grandfather. It is really one of those trades that isn’t taught. It’s passed down from generation to generation. My dad was extremely particular about the suppliers we purchased from and he insisted on bringing in only the highest quality products.”
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Left, Rocky Palmer learned the art of butchery from his father and grandfather. Above, Palmerʼs master butcher team lead by (L-R) Donald, Mark, Youmi, John and Joe.
Sourcing the finest quality products has been a mantra that has endured over the past 100 years. The store carries dryaged, prime, choice, and grass-fed beef, along with milkfed veal, bison, venison and duck breast. “We will custom cut any meat to order,” said Greg. Fresh rabbit, wild boar and other game are available by special request. Even at the start of the pandemic, when staple items like dairy, flour, cereal, canned goods, and paper products were in short supply, Palmer's was able to keep its top-quality meat supply chain flowing.
My father did what he had to do to keep his customers supplied. He would get a 100 lb. piece of meat, grind it up and put it in one-pound packages, but always under the counter. When customers would come in from New York and other places, trying to buy meat under the table without ration cards, they would see there was no meat in the case. My father would tell them he didn’t have any. He saved it for his regular customers, and that wasn’t ever forgotten. He built a very strong customer base with his loyalty.”
Greg’s father, Alphonse, one of Rocky’s two brothers and the last of the third generation of Palmers, notes that it wasn’t so simple for his father, Joseph, who was confronted with significant food shortages during World War II. Meat, like all other foods, was rationed.
A century of that loyalty, excellence, and community spirit continues to this day. The Palmer family of the twenty first century has curated a vibrant and fresh collection of specialty provisions, flowers, gifts and groceries, but they have never forgotten their roots as serious purveyors of high-quality meat nor the fine art of butchery.
“We had coupons for butter, eggs, meat, coffee, sugar... everything was bought in bulk and we had to weigh it all out in small batches so everyone would get some.
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palmersdarien.com 264 Heights Road, Darien CT
2/11/21 11:58 AM
MAR/APR 2021 contents features vol. 21 | issue 2
46
ON THE BRIGHT SIDE Real estate is booming. Here’s what you can do to get in while it’s hot. by l i z ba rron
52
TIMELESS TREASURE A look inside a stunning 1863 New Canaan Colonial by m al ia mc k i nnon fr ame
62
THE SOCIAL LANDSCAPE Spectacular outdoor living spaces you’ll never want to leave by t om c on nor
70
SPRING FASHION 50+ new pieces for a new season by m e g an g ag non
departments 12 EDITOR’S LETTER 15 STATUS REPORT
BUZZ A brand new library in New Canaan; Upgraded shopping in Greenwich SHOP Unique finds from Curio Shop DO Fertility with aholistic approach HOME The she shed of your dreams; Elevated design with Smallbone 30 FINANCE FIX 79 INDEX OF ADVERTISERS 80 POSTSCRIPT
52
If you think this room is pretty, just wait until you see the rest of this Timeless Treasure.
NEW CANAAN • DARIEN & ROWAYTON MAR/APR 2021, VOL. 21, NO. 2. NEW CANAAN • DARIEN & ROWAYTON (ISSN 1942-1028) is published bimonthly by Moffly Media, Inc., 205 Main St, Westport, CT 06880. Periodical postage paid at Westport, CT, and additional mailing offices. POSTMASTER: Send address changes (Form 3579) to NEW CANAAN PO BOX 9309, Big Sandy, TX 75755-9607. U.S. Subscription rates: $19.95/1 year (6 issues), $32.95/2 years; Canada and Foreign $40/1 year, $66/2 years.
JANE BEILES
COVER PHOTOGRAPH BY ANDREA CARSON
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YA R D TO TA B LE
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VOLUME 21
ISSUE 2
MARCH/APRIL 2021
sales + marketing Gina Fusco
editorial editorial director Cristin Marandino editor Julee Kaplan
publisher
style director Megan Gagnon
gina.fusco@moffly.com
advisory editor Donna Moffly
Jonathan W. Moffly art senior art director Venera Alexandrova senior art director/status report Garvin Burke production director Tim Carr design assistant Taylor Stroili
publisher, athome, greenwich, fairfield living
jonathan.moffly@moffly.com Gabriella Mays publisher, westport
gabriella.mays@moffly.com contributors editors
Karen Kelly-Micka
Elizabeth Hole - editor, custom publishing Diane Sembrot - editor, fairfield living; westport; stamford
publisher, stamford
karen.kelly@moffly.com
Amy Vischio - athome creative director-at-large
Rick Johnson account executive
writers
rick.johnson@moffly.com
Liz Barron, Kim-Marie Evans, Malia McKinnon Frame, Mary Kate Hogan
Hilary Hotchkiss acount executive
copy editors
hilary.hotchkiss@moffly.com
Terry Christofferson, Kathy Satterfield
Kathleen Godbold
editorial advisory board
partnership and big picture manager
Robert Doran, Sue Frelinghuysen, David Genovese, Nancy Helle, Claire Hunter, Robyn Kammerer, Rita Kirby, George McEvoy, Julianna Spain, Amy Wilkinson, Torrance York
kathleen.godbold@moffly.com Rachel Shorten events director
digital director of content strategy Diane Sembrot digital marketing manager Rachel MacDonald digital assistant Lloyd Gabi
rachel.shorten@moffly.com Lemuel Bandala sales assistant
lemuel.bandala@moffly.com business president Jonathan W. Moffly chief revenue officer Andrew Amill editorial director Cristin Marandino director of content strategy Diane Senbrot business manager Elena V. Moffly cofounders John W. Moffly IV and Donna C. Moffly
Eillenn Bandala business assistant
eillenn.bandala@moffly.com
published by 205 Main Street, Westport, CT 06880 phone: 203-222-0600 fax: 203-222-0937 mail@mofflymedia.com Publishers of FAIRFIELD LIVING, GREENWICH, NEW CANAAN - DARIEN, WESTPORT, STAMFORD and athome Magazines advertising inquiries Lemuel Bandala email advertise@mofflymedia.com. TO SUBSCRIBE, renew, or change your address, please e-mail us at subscribe@ncdmag.com, call 1-877-467-1735, or write to New Canaan - Darien magazine, 111 Corporate Drive, Big Sandy, TX 75755. U.S. subscription rates: $19.95/1 year (6 issues); $32.95/2 years (12 issues); $44.95/3 years (18 issues). Canada and foreign, US $36/year. Prices are subject to change without notice. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. No part of this periodical may be reproduced without express permission of the publisher. ©2021 New Canaan - Darien magazine is a registered trademark owned by Moffly Media. The opinions expressed by writers commissioned for articles published by New Canaan - Darien magazine are not necessarily those of the magazine. FOR QUALITY CUSTOM REPRINTS/E-PRINTS, please call 203-571-1645 or e-mail reprints@mofflymedia.com
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CT037_ CT037_
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Product availability may vary by location. ©2021 California Closet Company, Inc. All rights reserved. Each franchise independently owned and operated. CT HIC #0657205 Product availability may vary by location. ©2021 California Closet Company, Inc. All rights reserved. Each franchise independently owned and operated. CT HIC #0657205 CT037_GreenwichMag_PXWine_9x10.8_0121.indd 1 10_11_NCD_Masthead_MarchApril_2021.indd 11 CT037_GreenwichMag_PXWine_9x10.8_0121.indd 1
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editor’s letter
HOME BASE
N
ever before has home meant to us what it does today. It’s our safe place, where we sleep, eat, learn, pray, work. It’s our source of entertainment (if you call a Netflix marathon with your immediate family members entertainment). It’s where everything (and I mean everything) happens. And, with that in mind, we present you with our Home issue, packed with great ideas to help you make your home even better than it is right now. We have décor inspiration with a look into one of New Canaan’s most beautiful historic homes (page 52). Photographer Jane Beiles and writer Malia McKinnon Frame take us through the vibrantly chic home of the Delgado family, designed by New Canaan-native Whitney Cole. You’ll also get a peek into Rowaytonbased designer Colleen Siddig’s secret garden hideaway (page 26), Darien’s newest online home décor shop (page 20) and loads of landscape inspiration (page 62). Also, for the first time in years, our real estate market is booming. If you want to sell, now’s the time.
Writer Liz Barron details it all out in “On the Bright Side” on page 46 so that you can make the best decisions with your investment. Also, be sure to read all the news about our new New Canaan Library plans which should start coming to life when they break ground in May. There’s also a super fun new shopping spot coming to Greenwich. Our Buzz section (page 15) has all the details. Finally, do not miss our special spring fashion report (page 70) where style director Megan Gagnon takes us through some of the best (and most comfortable) fashions we can get our hands on. After all, we should look our best for that next Zoom meeting. Cheers,
julee.kaplan@moffly.com
PHOTO BY KYLE NORTON
FOLLOW US ON INSTAGRAM @NCDMAG
MARCH/APRIL 2021 / JULEE KAPLAN
4 Ne
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singular in design “Edgy incarnations of luxury” Condé Nast Traveler
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buzz STATUS REPORT
A sketch of the new library design by Centerbrook Architects showcases a mid-century modern-inspired design.
MODERN BY DESIGN THE NEW CANAAN LIBRARY TO BREAK GROUND IN MAY
CONTRIBUTED
S
omething big is about to happen in New Canaan. The New Canaan Library, which hasn’t gone through any sort of major renovation since 1979, is getting a complete rehaul. The $30 million project (with over half of that amount having already been raised through capital campaigns) is set to begin in May with a groundbreaking that will eventually tear down the entire existing structure and replace it with a new, state-of-the-art facility. The
by julee k apl an
new 44,000-square-foot building will not only be totally environmentally friendly with a LEED certification, it will also become a much-sought after community center base for residents of the town. The library’s executive director, Lisa Oldham, says that this project has been in the making for about ten years and she is beyond ready to see it come to life. “Our new building design will not only be environmentally friendly, it will have flexible, light-filled spaces and innovative services
that will promote lifelong learning and enhance community life,” Oldham explains. “It’s really going to change how people use the library, and it’s going to bring people together in ways that haven’t happened before.” The new building has been designed by Centerbrook Architects, which has a great deal of experience in creating libraries having designed the Mark Twain Library in Redding and Lewis Walpole Library at Yale University
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This expansive open space is being called the living room where guests can comfortably sit, grab a mystery and get cozy by a large fireplace.
to name just a couple. Jim Childress FAIA, principal at Centerbrook, says that a lecture at the New Canaan Library by Fred Noyes, son of famed Harvard Five architect Elliot Noyes, and a tour of the Phillip Johnson Glass House were both major inspirations to the new library’s modern design. “I’d like to think the new library will make the library more of who they already are,” Childress says. “There is a lot of passion for what they already provide, and even more for enhancing that for decades to come. It is heartwarming to see such a strong drive for lifelong learning—inspiring really.” The large bright open-air library design will include a grand concourse with an art gallery and café, something that has been largely requested from community feedback, Oldham says. The children’s room will be greatly expanded from what it is now,
allowing for lots of open space for toddlers to explore and shelving with books at their level. There will also be comfortable seating for older children and space for parents to gather. Just outside of that space, an outdoor children’s garden is planned to allow for easy access to safe play and fresh air. There will be a large entertainment wing with auditorium space and flexible seating for up to 300 guests, lab and learning center equipped with the latest cutting-edge technology. Up one level will be a living room, a hangout space with comfortable seating, large fireplace and extensive collections of mysteries and other fiction books. The glass-surrounded second floor offers adult seating, a business center and other enclosed multi-use meeting rooms. Teens will have their own space on the top floor with a roof terrace that overlooks the
grounds and the town center. Outside there is a one-acre town green space planned where Oldham says she imagines outdoor events happening as well as space for families to gather and hang out. While there will be ample parking available when the new library opens, at press time, the details were still being figured out. The whole project is said to take about 18 to 24 months to complete and current plans allow for the library to remain open during construction. While a large number of residents support the new library project, there are some local groups that aren’t as game for the removal of the portion of the current building that was built in 1913. One organization, which is part of the New Canaan Preservation Alliance, called Friends Of Our 1913 Library, claims that the original portion of the existing
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above: The new library will work as a community gathering space as well as a traditional library. below: Outdoor gardens and spaces for relaxing are important pieces to the new design.
library is in good enough shape that it should be a part of the new New Canaan Library design and should be preserved as a piece of the town’s history. Oldham disagrees. “The expansive town green and the new design far outweigh what would be if we kept the two walls that exist in the older building,” she explains. “It would be extremely costly to work it into the design and we would lose the town green space, which is such an important piece of what we are aiming to do.” Oldham said that economically it also wouldn’t make sense to keep the building since money would have to go into repairing it, bringing it up to code, heating it, cooling it and staffing it. For those interested in learning more about the Friends Of Our 1913 Library mission can find more information at newcanaanpreservationalliance.org.
“It is heartwarming to see such a strong drive for lifelong learning—inspiring, really.” –JIM CHILDRESS, CENTERBROOK ARCHITECTS
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buzz
NEW HORIZONS
PRE-COLLEGE SUMMER PROGRAMS OFFER A HOST
OF BENEFITS TO TEENS STARTING TO PLAN THEIR NEXT LIFE ADVENTURE by deena maerowitz, jd, msw
W
hen exploring options for teen summer plans, parents often ask me about pre-college programs that are hosted by colleges and universities. In particular, parents wonder if attending such programs now will enhance candidates’ college applications later. While there is no direct relationship between enrollment in a summer program and admission as an undergraduate, such activities offer plenty of benefits for college-bound teens: INCREASED CONFIDENCE AND A SENSE OF INDEPENDENCE Living in dorms, eating in dining halls, and making friends from around the world are fun challenges. Teens take pride in rising to the occasion of managing their time and laundry without parental reminders.
A NEW MEMBER OF THE SAKS FAMILY NOW CALLS THE AVENUE HOME
I
n January Greenwich welcomed a new face to the retail scene when Saks unveiled its first standalone BARNEYS AT SAKS store in town. Formerly the Saks Fifth Avenue The Collective, the 14,000-square-foot location will feature men’s shoes and accessories on the first floor and women’s contemporary fashion on the second. With shoes and accessories from designers including Alexander McQueen, Burberry, Dolce & Gabbana and Valentino, and jewelry, watches and sunglasses from Tom Ford, Movado, Prada, Gucci and Saint Laurent, this marks the first time Saks has offered men’s merchandise in Greenwich. But ladies, there’s still lots here for you, too. The Ready-to-Wear collections include (among plenty of others), 3.1 Phillip Lim, Alice + Olivia, Aviator Nation, Derek Lam, Frame, Isabel Marant Étoile, Moussy Vintage, Naadam, Proenza Schouler White Label, Rag & Bone, See by Chloé and Staud. All of the Saks services that you have come to know are available. Need help putting together the perfect look? Personalized selections can be prepared and waiting for you in a private dressing suite. Prefer to shop from home? Shop virtually via video conferencing with a style advisor. If you’d like to visit the store in person but want to avoid other shoppers, shop by appointment before or after store hours. Same day delivery service is also available. 200 Greenwich Avenue; 203-862-5300; saks.com/c/barneys-at-saks
IMMERSION IN SPECIAL INTERESTS Some programs spend weeks exploring a particular topic—like robotics, journalism, filmmaking, entrepreneurship or social justice. This intense focus can inspire tremendous growth and allow students to explore new fields. AN OPPORTUNITY TO SAMPLE COLLEGE-STYLE COURSES Students can enjoy classes with more focused themes that
are unavailable in most high schools. Compared to “Senior English,” courses that offer a deep dive into gothic novels or literature of the Harlem Renaissance may spark a love of learning. A VISION OF THEMSELVES ON A COLLEGE CAMPUS When students do start their college search, having lived on one campus may give them insights into others. Do they prefer a large college or a small campus? An urban or rural setting? SAMPLING A SETTING BEFORE APPLYING FOR EARLY DECISION Some students may like to see what living on a specific campus is like before applying to a school for early decision, which is binding. Of course, the most important aspect of any summer program
is what teens take away from it—new friends and expanded horizons. And as with any endeavor, the connection between this experience and the college application process depends on how relevant it is to a student’s personal growth and future dreams. Choosing meaningful summer activities is about focusing on students’ current interests, while also keeping an eye on what will support their development as young adults. Within that realm, pre-college programs are certainly something to consider.
Deena Maerowitz, JD, MSW of the Bertram Group, is a published author and speaker on college planning who advises students through the college admissions process. thebertramgroup.com
BARNEYS AT SAKS BY CHI CHI UBIÑA
Attention, Shoppers
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shop BY J U LE E KAPL A N
4
The U Candle by Glaze is made from 100 percent beeswax and available on curio.shop for $120; Suzie Jellinek in her home in Darien.
Flying High RARE LUXURY FINDS FROM CURIO SHOP
TO HELP YOU LOVE YOUR HOME NOW MORE THAN EVER
JULIA DAGS
S
uzie Jellinek can’t wait to get on a plane again. The Darien mom of three has always loved to travel. Born in South Africa and raised in Toronto, Jellinek spent years in New York after graduating from the Fashion Institute of Technology. Soon after college, she landed a job at the Associated Merchandising Corporation in Manhattan, which required her to scour the globe on the hunt for the items to please her retail clients. From there, she worked in product development for Ralph Lauren and eventually left to start a family and move to Darien. It was then that Jellinek began to miss the process of designing merchandise and turned to abstract painting, throwing all of her creative energy into time in the studio. “I’ve always dabbled in art and love the creative process,” Jellinek says sitting in the stunning kitchen of the home she designed in 2011. Restoration Hardware has even taken notice of her paintings and will be reproducing a
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BOGC_
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VOTE for your favorite local businesses for Best of the Gold Coast BESTOFGOLDCOASTCT.COM Voting ends MARCH 15
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select number of her works for sale in their stores nationwide. Once the pandemic hit, Jellinek decided to take her creative energy another step forward to launch an online shop she calls Curio Shop. The site, curio.shop, which launched in the fall, was originally meant as a way to sell her own artwork, but it soon expanded further when Jellinek decided to use it as a way to sell a carefully edited collection of objects from her travels. “I’m fortunate to be able to have an online business that speaks to people as we spend more time at home and want to make our homes more beautiful,” she explains. Curio Shop is a clear vision of Jellinek’s collected style. It’s broken up into four sections—Decorate (fine home décor), Collect (artwork and other rare finds), Adorn (jewelry designed primarily by women makers) and Care (beauty, candles, skincare and other non-toxic items). Nothing sold on the site is mass produced and everything has a special significance, whether there is a great story behind the design, one-ofa-kind art pieces or items that can be used in multiple ways. Many of the
“I’m fortunate to be able to have an online business that speaks to people as we spend more time at home.” –SUZIE JELLINEK, CURIO SHOP
LEFT: A shelving unit in Jellinek’s family room displays the Giacomo Alessi Moorish Head with various other accessories available on the Curio Shop site. ABOVE: One-of-a-kind paintings like this one by Jellinek are for sale on curio.shop.
pieces can be found in Jellinek’s own home, like a Louise Roe Brilliant Bon Bonniere Jar, a mouth-blown glass jar that was traditionally filled with candies and given to guests at weddings or other large event. It retails for $80. You’ll also find a Giacomo Alessi Moorish Head ceramic pot, which is a popular design seen throughout Sicily but is rather rare in the U.S. The pot retails for $650. There are various sculptures, throws, vases, candle holders and pure clean-burning beeswax candles. Items have traveled with Jellinek from places as far as Italy to as close as the Catskill mountains. Prices range from $8 for a pouch of bath salts to $2,400 for an original painting. A percentage of all sales on the site goes to the Equal Justice Initative, an organization committed to challenging racial and economic injustice and protecting human rights in the U.S. newcanaandarienmag.com
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A rc hi tec ture: C h a r l e s H i l t o n A r c h i t e c t s Pho to gra phy : Rob e r t Be n s o n
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do by liz barron
OH BABY
NEW CUTTING-EDGE FERTILITY TREATMENTS HELP WOMEN
F
or those struggling with infertility, modern technology is certainly evolving and working in their favor. And, thanks to the presence of a new Westport practice, Rejuvenating Fertility Center, founded by Zaher Merhi, MD, FACOG, HCLD, there is more hope than ever. Dr. Merhi, who also runs a practice in Manhattan, provides individualized treatment protocols to target each patient’s needs, with various cutting-edge practices to help families reach their goals faster than before. Dr. Merhi’s main philosophy when it comes to invitro fertilization (IVF) is that the less medication he can use, the better the result will be. While certain medications can certainly assist in egg production, the quality of those eggs is often in question. “When you are able to use less medication, the quality of the eggs produced is usually higher,” he says. “You only need one good egg to make a healthy baby.” But this doesn’t mean medication is always abandoned. Treatment plans vary from patient to patient, and Dr. Merhi customizes the course of action based on the patient’s age and ovarian reserve (number of eggs in her ovaries). If a young patient has a high ovarian reserve, Dr. Merhi uses larger doses
of medication to “feed” all of the eggs and ensure that they effectively mature and grow. As a woman gets older, she will tend to have fewer and more “fragile” eggs, which means that less medication is needed. Dr. Mehri explains that “over feeding, or over medicating, can actually negatively impact
FERTILITY FACTS HEALTHY HABITS Diets rich in vitamin D and taking vitamin D supplements have shown potential to help with producing healthy eggs. Avoiding fried foods is also important as some of the chemicals in these foods could negatively impact the quality of a woman’s eggs.
WHEN TO GO Women younger than 35 should try to conceive naturally for one year. Women older than 35 should try for six months prior to seeing a fertility doctor.
INVESTMENT Average IVF cycle costs vary from $6,000 to $12,000.
SUCCESS RATES From 25 percent to 70 percent and decline as maternal age advances
the quality of the eggs.” Dr. Merhi’s practice offers a large range in traditional treatment options, but his center is one of only a few clinics in the world to offer ovarian rejuvenation. The experimental, minimally invasive procedure involves injecting platelets into each ovary in order to restore ovarian tissue, thus increasing the chances of producing not only more eggs, but also better quality eggs. Success rates depend on patient’s age, diagnosis and frequency of the menstrual cycle. While low anti-müllerian hormone (AMH) levels or low ovarian reserve are more wellknown reasons why women continue to seek fertility treatments, Dr. Merhi says there are other issues that continue to cause fertility issues. For example, premature ovarian insufficiency can make pregnancy difficult and tends to occur when women younger than 40 stop producing eggs. It is similar to entering menopause at a young age and, he says, with few to no eggs it is difficult to get pregnant. polycystic ovarian syndrome (PCOS) can also interfere with pregnancy by causing irregular ovulation. That said, Dr. Merhi says that he can provide women with every chance possible to have a successful, healthy pregnancy.
PHOTO BY ©FOTODUETS - STOCK.ADOBE.COM
CONCEIVE WITH A HOLISTIC APPROACH
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home
by julee k apl an • photo gr aphs by andrea carson
Designer and homeowner Colleen Siddig turned her garden shed into a fresh work and entertaining space that she can use year-round.
BACKYARD CHIC
A ROWAYTON-BASED INTERIOR DESIGNER TURNS HER GARDEN SHED INTO THE PERSONAL RETREAT OF HER DREAMS
W
hen interior designer COLLEEN SIDDIG purchased her home in Rowayton about four years ago, she always knew she would eventually want to do something inventive with the little garden shed out back. But, she admitted, it was a project that would sit on the back burner. “The shed was a little added bonus and I always saw its potential,” she says. “It was like a little dream in my head.” The dream became a reality late last year
when Siddig finally had some time to create a true multi-use space in the 12-foot-by8-foot shed. The idea, she explains, was to have a space that could be used for her work—to showcase accessories collected from her sourcing and from various clients’ projects—as well as an office where she could work and meet with clients without having them physically inside her home. She also wanted the shed to double as a retail space where she could hold a semi-annual
sale so she can purge current inventory and change out her displays. She also wanted it to be easily converted to a space where she could have family, friends and clients over for cocktails or even a garden party on warmer days. “The reality of working at home with my husband and two kids around during the spring made me feel like I needed a separate space outside of the house and that set the project into motion,” Siddig explains. “Now that it's built,
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when I see an accessory or vintage piece that I love, I don't hesitate because I know that I'll have a chance to feature it in a future shed sale.” In order to convert the shed into the space that Siddig imagined, she had to do quite a bit of construction. It needed to be fully insulated, electrical had to be added, new windows and flooring. The biggest expense and dramatic change was to add in a large window on the side that flips open to reveal
an indoor-outdoor bar area that doubles as a worktable. Shelving was added to display décor sourced from Siddig’s travels, lighting was brought in and a ceiling fan to help distribute air flow through the space. Siddig decided to forego a brand-new floor in favor of a painted blue hexagon pattern done right on the existing plywood. White shiplap walls add to the clean seaside feel of the shed and work as a canvas for her displays. Simple furnishings like
a comfortable bench, table and barstools are the only pieces not for sale inside the space. “It was very important for me to keep the character of the garden shed but elevated and upgraded,” Siddig says. “I wanted it to be representative of the work that I do and really ended up going above and beyond what we were planning. I wanted it to be a space I feel good about bringing people in. And it really is just that.”
BELOW: Just about everything inside the shed (with the exception of some furnishings) is for sale. TOP RIGHT: A large new window flips open to reveal an indoor/ outdoor bar/work space. BOTTOM RIGHT: Siddig accessorizes the shelves inside the shed.
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home
Named after the renowned street in Manhattan’s Little Italy, this Smallbone Mulberry kitchen design exudes clean lines combined with an eclectic mix of materials including sustainable oak with Calacatta Oro marble worktops.
Luxe Living
W
ith more than a forty-year heritage of British design and craftsmanship, Smallbone has added the new Greenwich Showroom to its roster. Known as a pioneer in cabinetry and kitchen design, the luxury lifestyle brand carries its attention to detail throughout the entire house and is ready to make its mark in Greenwich homes.
“With its magnificent homes and top-end industry professionals in design and architecture, Greenwich has always been a natural environment for Smallbone to work and thrive in. Our very first showroom opened in Greenwich in the 90s,” says Ronnie Shemesh, Lux Group Holdings President Value Creation Officer. “We are delighted to be back in the town and look forward to bringing our flair and style to upcoming projects.”
CONTRIBUTED
CHIC AND SLEEK DESIGN WITH HAND CRAFTSMANSHIP HERITAGE
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“Understanding how one’s client enjoys living life is ultimately the driving force for any great design.” –RONNIE SHEMESH, LUX GROUP HOLDINGS PRESIDENT VALUE CREATION OFFICER
above: The new Icarus kitchen collection features floating, scalloped glass cabinets inspired by Greek mythology and a dramatic—and utilitarian—glass centerpiece. below: Smallbone offers whole-house solutions including bespoke wine rooms and dressing rooms.
From elegant wine walls, bedside tables, armoires and wardrobes to beautifully appointed dressing rooms, media rooms, home offices and studies, every project begins with the craftsmen in its Wiltshire workshop. The Greenwich Showroom presents the company’s whole-home furniture collections, including the newly updated Mulberry Collection featuring clean lines and strong color, as well as cutting-edge technology such as the Samsung AirDresser that uses heat, air and steam to eradicate germs. Every project has a dedicated design and installation team and is a close collaboration between designer and client. “Understanding how one’s client enjoys living life is ultimately the driving force for any great design,” says Shemesh. “For example, if you love to entertain a large group or family, with everyone engaging in the kitchen space, then we’ll create the ultimate lifestyle room—a space that allows for entertaining, cooking and socializing, often incorporating informal dining, a bar, TV viewing area and the increasingly popular multiple work-bays for that quick Zoom meeting. With rooms uniquely designed for each individual, they become a special part of how we live, and this is the reward of a personal client relationship.” 45 East Putnam Ave.; smallbone.co.uk
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MONEY / BY CAROL LEONETTI DANNHAUSER
AS YOU WISH
Laura Beck
H
ow would you answer these questions posed by estate-planning expert Laura Beck: If you die tomorrow, what will happen to your assets? Who will carry out your wishes? Who will care for your loved ones? As Covid-19 wreaks havoc here in lower Fairfield County and beyond, many people are scurrying to sort out the answers. “People don’t always get their car maintained until it starts making a noise,” says Beck, a principal and chairman of the Private Clients Group at Cummings & Lockwood in Greenwich. “Because of Covid, people are home more—working remotely,
ESTATE PLANNING IN THE SHADOW OF COVID-19
not going away, maybe not as busy—and their own mortality may be more real than they thought of.” It isn’t unusual for big life events such as marriage, divorce, a birth or a death to stir interest in estate planning. But the pandemic has heightened this all. “A record number of new people are coming in, and existing clients are coming back in unusual volume,” Beck reports. “It’s not necessarily that everyone woke up and said, ‘Oh my God, I never heard of a thing called an estate plan,’ but it all hits home when you hear about 200,000 people, or a million, dying.” Estate plans are legal documents that help your family effectuate your wishes. More than a will, they spell out what happens to your property and assets when you die; who will care for your minor children; how your family’s assets will be protected and distributed; and, particularly timely these days,
who will manage your assets and affairs should you become incapacitated. For example, many people have a living will that prohibits extraordinary life support measures should the person become incapacitated. “Here’s this new virus. A lot of people are wondering how their living will will be interpreted. If you’ve appointed someone as your healthcare agent, are they going to pull the plug on you when your family wants to give you a chance on the ventilator?” Similarly, if your children are over eighteen and they haven’t legally named you as a healthcare agent, you’re not allowed to make their healthcare decisions. “My eighteen-year-old needs a healthcare proxy so that I can even talk to their doctors. When your kid’s unconscious and away at school and they never signed a proxy to let somebody talk to you? Well, you want to have those in place ahead of time.”
1
LAST WORD
4 reasons to finally take care of an ESTATE PLAN What’s the big deal if you don’t have an estate plan?
Your life savings might go to “unintended beneficiaries,” such as your ex’s new family or your irresponsible nephews.
2
Your assets will be eaten by probate costs.
It’s not only Covid-19 wreaking havoc on estate plans. Many high-net-worth families here in Fairfield County fear that the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act, which carries an $11.58 million gift and estate tax exclusion, will be revoked by President-elect Joe Biden. Many are rushing to create trusts to shield their assets from Uncle Sam’s grasp. With the right planning ahead of time, a host of revocable and irrevocable trusts with an alphabet-soup collection of titles, from Estate Reduction Trusts to SLATS to G2s and G3s, can significantly minimize estate taxes or eliminate them altogether. Estate planning is not a set-itand-forget-it exercise. Rather, it should be a dynamic undertaking based on your changing wishes, assets, tax laws, state of residence and family situation, Beck says. Revisit the plan every three to five years, with your attorney, accountant and financial adviser all weighing in.
3
Your family will spend time, money and anguish trying to agree on your wishes.
4
Your legacy could get clobbered by unnecessary taxes, versus distributed to charities or loved ones.
PORTRAIT, CONTRIBUTED; ESTATE PLANNING ©SNOWING12 - STOCK.ADOBE.COM
fınance fıx
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Own your worth Women‘s path to financial independence Private Wealth Management
Women hold a third of the wealth in the world, and that share is growing faster than ever. This gives them tremendous power to live their dreams and change the world. Like you, at UBS we’re looking to grow that potential for women today, women of the next generation and those that follow. It is our focus and belief at UBS that as the world’s largest wealth manager,2 we can usher in a new mindset for women to make sure that they are taking a seat at the financial table. This mission is particularly important, because our Own Your Worth research shows that many women are still not taking part in major financial decisions today. At UBS, we have an impressive, dedicated team leading the effort to drive meaningful change. Thank you to all who joined our Own Your Worth women’s event!
Thomas Mantione, CEPA®, CPWA® Managing Director–Wealth Management
If you missed the event in February, you can scan the below QR code and listen to the podcast or check out our website for more information ubs.com/team/shantzmantione.
Andrew Shantz, CEPA®, CPWA® Senior Vice President–Wealth Management
Scan to listen to our recent podcasts.
Jill Orlando Relationship Manager
The Shantz Mantione Group UBS Financial Services Inc. Private Wealth Management 750 Washington Boulevard, 11th Floor Stamford, CT 06901 866-860-7266 toll free
ubs.com/team/shantzmantione
Source: BCG, Managing the Next Decade of Women’s Wealth, April 2020. Scorpio Partnership’s “Global Private Banking Benchmark 2018” rank of global wealth managers by assets under management. As a firm providing wealth management services to clients, UBS Financial Services Inc. offers investment advisory services in its capacity as an SEC-registered investment adviser and brokerage services in its capacity as an SEC-registered broker-dealer. Investment advisory services and brokerage services are separate and distinct, differ in material ways and are governed by different laws and separate arrangements. It is important that clients understand the ways in which we conduct business, that they carefully read the agreements and disclosures that we provide to them about the products or services we offer. For more information, please review the PDF document at ubs.com/relationshipsummary. For designation disclosures, visit ubs.com/us/en/designation-disclosures. Private Wealth Management is a division within UBS Financial Services Inc., which is a subsidiary of UBS AG. © UBS 2021. All rights reserved. UBS Financial Services Inc. is a subsidiary of UBS AG. Member FINRA/SIPC. CJ-UBS-1719414556 Exp.: 02/28/2022
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PHOTOGRAPH BY ©CORGARASHU - STOCK.ADOBE.COM
TOP LAWYERS in
FAIRFIELD COUNTY MARCH 2021 GREENWICH
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TOP LAWYERS in
FAIRFIELD COUNTY
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300-plus leading lawyers practicing in Fairfield County. The list has been compiled by DataJoe Research through peer voting and research. With this list, you won't need to ask your friends for referrals or waste time searching online. All you have to do is review what follows, find the relevant area of practice, visit the websites and call for a consultation. Then leave the rest to the professionals.
e all know it’s best to consult with an attorney for advice when a legal problem arises, but the truth is most of us only seek out a lawyer once that issue—an accident, wrongful termination or custody battle— comes up. Our intent with the list that follows is to encourage you to plan ahead. But in case you need advice this minute, the research has been done for you with this listing of ADOPTION LAW
VICTORIA FERRARA
The Ferrara Law Group 2150 Post Rd, Fairfield 203-255-9877 victoriaferrara.com
APPELLATE LAW BRENDEN LEYDON
Wocl Leydon, LLC 80 4th St, Stamford 203-333-3339 woclleydon.com
NORMAN ROBERTS II GraberRoberts, LLC 350 Bedford St, Stamford 203-590-1070 graberroberts.com
SAMUEL SCHOONMAKER IV
The Schoonmaker Legal Group, LLC 84 W Park Pl, Stamford 203-487-0291 schoonlegal.com
STANLEY TWARDY JR Day Pitney LLP 263 Tresser Blvd, Stamford 203-977-7368 daypitney.com
ARBITRATION AND MEDIATION STEPHEN FOGERTY
Halloran & Sage LLP 315 Post Rd W, Westport 203-227-2855 halloransage.com
ELAINE GORDON
Gordon ADR, LLC PO Box 1218, Westbrook 800-237-7007 gordonadr.com
DOUGLAS MINTZ
Carmody Torrance Sandak & Hennessey LLP 707 Summer St, Stamford 203-252-2658 carmodylaw.com
LYNDA MUNRO
Pullman & Comley LLC 850 Main St,
Bridgeport 203-330-2065 pullcom.com
ALAN NEVAS
Verrill Dana LLP 355 Riverside Ave, Westport 203-222-3120 verrill-law.com
DEBORAH NOONAN
Deborah Noonan 10 Wall St, Norwalk 203-246-4741 divorcemediatect.com
JAY SANDAK
Carmody Torrance Sandak & Hennessey LLP 707 Summer St, Stamford 203-252-2699 carmodylaw.com
MAURICE SEGALL
Maurice Segall LLC 1111 Summer St, Stamford 203-359-1999 ctmediation.com
VICKI VOLPER
Vicki Volper, JD, LLM 246 Post Rd E, Westport 203-222-1202 vickivolper.com
ATTORNEYS FOR NONPROFITS STEFANIA BARTLETT
MATTHEW BEATMAN
Mcelroy, Deutsch, Mulvaney and Carpenter, LLP 30 Jelliff Ln, Southport 203-319-4022 mdmc-law.com
JOSEPH MARTINI
JEFFERY SKLARZ
DAVID MOROSAN
BUSINESS LAW
KEVIN PALUMBERI
Spears Manning & Martini LLC 2425 Post Rd, Southport 203-292-9766 spearsmanning.com
Green & Sklarz LLC One Audubon St, New Haven 203-285-8545 gs-lawfirm.com
Cohen and Wolf PC 1115 Broad St, Bridgeport 203-337-4162 cohenandwolf.com Carmody Torrance Sandak & Hennessey LLP 707 Summer St, Stamford 203-252-2692 carmodylaw.com
R BEACH
Day Pitney LLP 24 Field Point Rd, Greenwich 203-862-7824 daypitney.com
HEATHER RAHILLY
Wiggin and Dana LLP 281 Tresser Blvd, Stamford 203-363-7603 wiggin.com
STEVEN CERTILMAN
Steven A. Certilman, P.C. 350 Bedford St, Stamford 203-977-7800 certilman.com
JUSTIN GALLETTI
Pullman & Comley LLC 850 Main St, Bridgeport 203-330-2243 pullcom.com
Cohen and Wolf PC 1115 Broad St, Bridgeport 203-337-4137 cohenandwolf.com
KRISTIN MAYHEW
JENNIFER PAGNILLO
ELIZABETH AUSTIN
DAVID LEVINE
Pullman & Comley LLC 850 Main St., Bridgeport 203-330-2213 pullcom.com
SETH COOPER
BANKRUPTCY AND WORKOUT
Pullman & Comley LLC 850 Main St, Bridgeport 203-330-2284 pullcom.com
IRVE GOLDMAN
Cummings & Lockwood LLC 6 Landmark Sq, Stamford 203-351-4417 cl-law.com Day Pitney LLP 24 Field Point Rd, Greenwich 203-862-7875 daypitney.com
KAREN JEFFERS
Zeisler & Zeisler, PC 10 Middle St, Bridgeport 203-368-4234 zeislaw.com
MATTHEW SUSMAN
Cohen and Wolf PC 1115 Broad St, Bridgeport 203-337-4236 cohenandwolf.com
Brody Wilkinson PC 2507 Post Rd, Southport 203-319-7123 brodywilk.com
KAREN WACKERMAN
Brody Wilkinson PC 2507 Post Rd, Southport 203-319-7135 brodywilk.com
Pullman & Comley LLC 850 Main St, Bridgeport 203-330-2278 pullcom.com
THOMAS GOLDBERG
THOMAS WALSH JR
Day Pitney LLP 263 Tresser Blvd, Stamford 203-977-7383 daypitney.com
Brody Wilkinson PC 2507 Post Rd, Southport 203-319-7145 brodywilk.com
BARBARA YOUNG
MICHAEL HERLING
Verrill Dana LLP 355 Riverside Ave, Westport 203-222-3123 verrill-law.com
Finn Dixon & Herling LLP 6 Landmark Sq, Stamford 203-325-5015 fdh.com
CIVIL LAW LITIGATION ROBERT ADELMAN
Adelman Hirsch & Connors, LLP 1000 Lafayette Blvd, Bridgeport 203-331-8888 ahctriallaw.com
CHARLES DELUCA
Ryan Ryan Deluca LLP 1000 Lafayette Blvd, Bridgeport 203-541-5000 ryandelucalaw.com
MONTE FRANK
Pullman & Comley LLC 850 Main St, Bridgeport 203-330-2262 pullcom.com
STEVEN FRENKEL
Cummings & Lockwood LLC 6 Landmark Sq, Stamford 203-351-4206 cl-law.com
DAVID GOLUB
Silver Golub & Teitell LLP 184 Atlantic St, Stamford 203-325-4491 sgtlaw.com
MARC GRENIER
DePanfilis & Vallerie LLC 25 Belden Ave, Norwalk 203-846-9585 dandvlaw.com
ROBERT HICKEY
Ryan Ryan Deluca LLP 1000 Lafayette Blvd, Bridgeport 203-541-5005 ryandelucalaw.com
MICHAEL JONES
Ivey, Barnum & O'Mara, LLC 170 Mason St, Greenwich 203-661-6000 ibolaw.com
MICHAEL KAELIN Cummings & Lockwood LLC 6 Landmark Sq, Stamford 203-351-4106 cl-law.com
STUART KATZ
Cohen and Wolf PC 1115 Broad St, Bridgeport 203-337-4205 cohenandwolf.com
GARY KLEIN
Carmody Torrance Sandak & Hennessey LLP 707 Summer St, Stamford 203-252-2696 carmodylaw.com
THOMAS LAMBERT
Pullman & Comley LLC 850 Main St, Bridgeport 203-330-2147 pullcom.com
PAUL LANGE
Law Offices of Paul A. Lange, LLC 80 Ferry Blvd, Stratford 203-375-7724 lopal.com
ROBERT LAPLACA
Verrill Dana LLP 355 Riverside Ave, Westport 203-222-3110 verrill-law.com
DAVID MARTIN
Cummings & Lockwood LLC 6 Landmark Sq, Stamford 203-351-4108 cl-law.com
FRANK MURPHY
Tierney, Zullo, Flaherty & Murphy, P.C. 134 East Ave, Norwalk 203-853-7000 tierneyzullomurphy.com
CATHERINE NIETZEL
Ryan Ryan Deluca LLP 1000 Lafayette Blvd, Bridgeport 203-541-5020 ryandelucalaw.com
JAMES NOONAN
Ryan Ryan Deluca LLP 1000 Lafayette Blvd, Bridgeport 203-541-5045 ryandelucalaw.com
TIMOTHY RONAN
Pullman & Comley LLC 281 Tresser Blvd, Stamford
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Pullman & Comley’s Westport team
Pullman & Comley, LLC 253 Post Road West P.O. Box 3179 Westport, CT 06880 203-254-5000 | pullcom.com Pullman & Comley is one of Connecticut’s preeminent fullservice law firms and a leader in the business community since 1919, partnering with our clients to solve their most complex legal challenges. With three offices in Fairfield County, we have close ties to the communities where we live and work. We serve emerging growth businesses and public and private companies of all sizes, as well as educational institutions, government entities and nonprofits, in the areas of business and finance,
environmental, energy, healthcare, labor and employment, litigation, real estate and land use law. We also provide a range of legal services tailored to individuals, families, and closelyheld businesses. Our Family Law attorneys, for example, are skilled in all aspects of divorce, property distribution, alimony, child support and child custody, pre- and post-nuptial agreements, and collaborative divorce. The Alternative Dispute Resolution practice offers mediation services in both business disputes and all family and matrimonial matters. Our Trusts and Estates attorneys provide estate, gift tax, business succession, charitable giving, and philanthropic planning; estate settlement; trust administration; conservatorships; and probate
litigation. Attorneys in our Tax practice regularly advise businesses, individuals and tax-exempt entities on all aspects of federal, state, local and international tax matters. We have built our reputation over the past 102 years on being there for our clients – and our communities – in the most challenging times. Pullman & Comley’s mantra of “Pulling Together, Succeeding Together” describes our firm culture, and it was more evident over the past year than perhaps at any other time in our history. We are proud that even while working apart, we came together to help our clients respond to unprecedented times, navigate the uncertainty, and even create new opportunities. We are hopeful as we look forward to brighter days ahead.
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TOP LAWYERS in
FAIRFIELD COUNTY
203-674-7933 pullcom.com
203-653-5438 murthalaw.com
KRISTEN ROSSETTI
SCOTT HARRINGTON
Verrill Dana LLP 355 Riverside Ave, Westport 203-222-3132 verrill-law.com
MICHAEL RYAN
Ryan Ryan Deluca LLP 1000 Lafayette Blvd, Bridgeport 203-541-5050 ryandelucalaw.com
GERARD SAGGESE III
Diserio Martin O'Connor & Castiglioni LLP 1 Atlantic St, Stamford 203-569-1107 diseriomartin.com
MARC KURZMAN
Carmody Torrance Sandak & Hennessey LLP 707 Summer St, Stamford 203-252-2680 carmodylaw.com
Whitman Breed Abbott & Morgan LLC 500 W Putnam Ave, Greenwich 203-862-2331 whitmanbreed.com
ANDREW NEVAS
FREDERIC URY
PETER NOLIN
Ury & Moskow, LLC 883 Black Rock Tpke, Fairfield 888-529-4335 urymoskow.com
CIVIL LAW TRANSACTIONAL EDMUND REMONDINO
Wofsey Rosen Kweskin & Kuriansky LLP 600 Summer St, Stamford 203-327-2300 wrkk.com
COMMERCIAL LITIGATION DAVID BALL
Cohen and Wolf PC 1115 Broad St, Bridgeport 203-337-4134 cohenandwolf.com
JAMES BICKS
Verrill Dana LLP 355 Riverside Ave, Westport 203-222-3103 verrill-law.com Carmody Torrance Sandak & Hennessey LLP 707 Summer St, Stamford 203-252-2688 carmodylaw.com
PHILIP PIRES
Cohen and Wolf PC 1115 Broad St, Bridgeport 203-337-4122 cohenandwolf.com
JAMES RILEY
Whitman Breed Abbott & Morgan LLC 500 W Putnam Ave, Greenwich 203-862-2342 whitmanbreed.com
JAMES SHEARIN
Pullman & Comley LLC 850 Main St, Bridgeport 203-330-2240 pullcom.com
FRANK SILVESTRI JR
Wiggin and Dana LLP 281 Tresser Blvd, Stamford 203-363-7622 wiggin.com
Verrill Dana LLP 355 Riverside Ave, Westport 203-222-3108 verrill-law.com
JOHN CANNAVINO
STEVEN STAFSTROM JR
Cummings & Lockwood LLC 6 Landmark Sq, Stamford 203-351-4447 cl-law.com
JOHN CARBERRY
Cummings & Lockwood LLC 6 Landmark Sq, Stamford 203-351-4280 cl-law.com
COLIN CONNOR
Russo & Rizio, LLC 2507 Post Rd, Southport 203-254-7579 russorizio.com
DAVID FRIEDMAN
Murtha Cullina 177 Broad St, Stamford
Pullman & Comley LLC 850 Main St, Bridgeport 203-330-2266 pullcom.com
ANDREW ZEITLIN
Shipman & Goodwin LLP 300 Atlantic St, Stamford 203-324-8111 shipmangoodwin.com
CORPORATE COUNSEL HAROLD FINN III
Finn Dixon & Herling LLP 6 Landmark Sq, Stamford 203-325-5029 fdh.com
J HANCOCK
203-625-8180 eugenericciolaw.com
Gregory And Adams, P.C. 190 Old Ridgefield Rd, Wilton 203-571-6306 gregoryandadams.com
MARK SHERMAN
The Law Offices of Mark Sherman, LLC 29 5th St, Stamford 203-489-2341 markshermanlaw.com
GARY HIRSCH
Hirsch Legal Group, LLC PO Box 7302, Wilton 917-623-3158 gotocounsel.com
BRIAN SPEARS
Spears Manning & Martini LLC 2425 Post Rd, Southport 203-292-9766 spearsmanning.com
CORPORATE FINANCE MERGERS AND ACQUISITIONS
LINDY URSO
Lindy R. Urso Attorney At Law 810 Bedford St, Stamford 203-325-4487 lindyursolaw.com
FRANK EUCALITTO
Robinson and Cole 1055 Washington Blvd, Stamford 203-462-7586 rc.com
WILLIAM WESTCOTT Maya Murphy, P.C. 266 Post Rd E, Westport 203-221-3100 mayalaw.com
NANCY HANCOCK
Pullman & Comley LLC 850 Main St, Bridgeport 203-330-2118 pullcom.com
C YOUNG
Cohen and Wolf PC 1115 Broad St, Bridgeport 203-368-0211 cohenandwolf.com
MARK KADUBOSKI
Wiggin and Dana LLP 281 Tresser Blvd, Stamford 203-363-7627 wiggin.com
EDUCATION
WILLIAM PERRONE
SARAH GLEASON
Wiggin and Dana LLP 281 Tresser Blvd, Stamford 203-363-7604 wiggin.com
Shipman & Goodwin LLP 300 Atlantic St, Stamford 203-324-8132 shipmangoodwin.com
STEPHEN SEDOR
CRIMINAL DEFENSE
Pullman & Comley LLC 850 Main St, Bridgeport 203-330-2137 pullcom.com
MICHAEL BIVONA
The Law Offices of Mark Sherman, LLC 29 5th St, Stamford 203-489-2341 markshermanlaw.com
ELDER LAW
Russo & Rizio, LLC One Post Rd, Fairfield 203-255-9928 russorizio.com
BRUCE KOFFSKY
Brody Wilkinson PC 2507 Post Rd, Southport 203-319-7112 brodywilk.com
FAMILY LAW LIVIA BARNDOLLAR
Pullman & Comley LLC 850 Main St, Bridgeport 203-330-2205 pullcom.com
CAMPBELL BARRETT
Pullman & Comley LLC 90 State House Square, Hartford 860-424-4353 pullcom.com
JANET BATTEY
Ferro & Battey, LLC 320 Post Rd, Darien 203-424-0482 ferrofamilylaw.com
JILL BICKS
Pullman & Comley LLC 253 Post Rd W, Westport 203-330-2257 pullcom.com
JILL BLOMBERG
Schoonmaker, George, Colin, Blomberg, Bryniczka & Welsh P.C 1700 E Putnam Ave, Old Greenwich 203-625-1873 sgbfamilylaw.com
JACQUELYN CONLON
Conlon McGlynn & McCann 222 Riverside Ave, Westport 203-222-8686 conlonmcglynn.com
KEVIN DAKEN
Siegel & Kaufman, PC 1266 E Main St, Stamford 203-326-5145 siegelkaufman.com
CHRISTOPHER DEMATTIE Broder, Orland, Murray & Demattie LLC 55 Greens Farms Rd, Westport 203-222-4949 broderorland.com
NICOLE DIGIOSE
Broder, Orland, Murray & Demattie LLC 55 Greens Farms Rd, Westport 203-222-4949 broderorland.com
ANNE DRANGINIS
Pullman & Comley LLC 850 Main St, Bridgeport 203-330-2246 pullcom.com
Cohen and Wolf PC 158 Deer Hill Ave, Danbury 203-749-5570 cohenandwolf.com
JENNIFER HAUHUTH
ERIC BRODER
GAETANO FERRO
Keogh, Burkhart & Vetter 34 Wall St, Norwalk 203-866-2535 keoghvetterlaw.com
Law Offices of Eugene J. Riccio 2000 Post Rd, Fairfield
JAMES RICE
THOMAS COLIN
WAYNE EFFRON
STEPHEN KEOGH
EUGENE RICCIO
Pullman & Comley LLC 90 State House Square, Hartford 860-424-4315 pullcom.com
GraberRoberts, LLC 350 Bedford St, Stamford 203-590-1070 graberroberts.com
Cohen and Wolf PC 1115 Broad St, Bridgeport 203-368-0211 cohenandwolf.com
Law Offices of Jennifer A Hauhuth 2425 Post Rd, Southport 203-254-7700 jenniferhauhuthlaw.com
Koffsky & Felsen, LLC 1150 Bedford St, Stamford 203-327-1500 koffskyfelsen.com
LEE HOFFMAN
ANTHONY CENATIEMPO
ANNMARIE BRIONES
ANN FOWLER-CRUZ
ROBERT GOLGER
ENERGY OIL AND GAS
1700 E Putnam Ave, Old Greenwich 203-625-1873 sgbfamilylaw.com
JAIME DURSHT
Beltrano Law 1037 East Putnam Ave, Riverside 203-340-2610 cthealthcareattorney .com
Koffsky & Felsen, LLC 1150 Bedford St, Stamford 203-327-1500 koffskyfelsen.com
Law Offices of Joel D. Muhlbaum, LLC 1100 Summer St, Stamford 203-323-1818 ctnyelderlaw.com
Schoonmaker, George, Colin, Blomberg, Bryniczka & Welsh P.C 1700 E Putnam Ave, Old Greenwich 203-625-1873 sgbfamilylaw.com
MICHELLE BELTRANO
AUDREY FELSEN
SHARON ROSEN
Broder, Orland, Murray & Demattie LLC 55 Greens Farms Rd, Westport 203-222-4949 broderorland.com
PETER BRYNICZKA
Schoonmaker, George, Colin, Blomberg, Bryniczka & Welsh P.C.
Broder, Orland, Murray & Demattie LLC 55 Greens Farms Rd, Westport 203-222-4949 broderorland.com Wayne D. Effron, P.C. 2 Greenwich Office Park, Greenwich 203-622-1160 effronlaw.com Ferro & Battey, LLC 320 Post Rd, Darien 203-424-0482 ferrofamilylaw.com
EVAMARIE FOX
Maya Murphy, P.C. 266 Post Rd E, Westport 203-221-3100 mayalaw.com
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TOP LAWYERS in
FAIRFIELD COUNTY
HOWARD GRABER
GraberRoberts, LLC 350 Bedford St, Stamford 203-590-1070 graberroberts.com
DAVID GRIFFIN
Rutkin, Oldham & Griffin, LLC 5 Imperial Ave, Westport 203-227-7301 rutkinoldham.com
ERIC HIGGINS
Wofsey Rosen Kweskin & Kuriansky LLP 600 Summer St, Stamford 203-327-2300 wrkk.com
JOCELYN HURWITZ
Cohen and Wolf PC 1115 Broad St, Bridgeport 203-337-4223 cohenandwolf.com
ROSS KAUFMAN
Siegel & Kaufman, PC 1266 E Main St, Stamford 203-326-5145 siegelkaufman.com
DYAN KOZACZKA
Rutkin, Oldham & Griffin, LLC 5 Imperial Ave, Westport 203-227-7301 rutkinoldham.com
AMY MACNAMARA
The Law Offices of Amy Calvo MacNamara LLC 2 Greenwich Office Park, Greenwich 203-542-2896 acmfamilylaw.com
DARCY MCALISTER
Carta McAlister & Moore LLC 1120 Boston Post Rd, Darien 203-202-3120 cmm-law.com
LAUREN MCCANN
Conlon McGlynn & McCann 222 Riverside Ave, Westport 203-222-8686 conlonmcglynn.com
LOUISE MCGLYNN
Conlon McGlynn & McCann 222 Riverside Ave, Westport 203-222-8686 conlonmcglynn.com
MICHAEL MEEHAN
MeehanLaw, LLC 76 Lyon Terrace, Bridgeport 203-333-1888 meehanlaw.com
H MURPHY
Maya Murphy, P.C. 266 Post Rd E, Westport 203-221-3100 mayalaw.com
SARAH MURRAY
Broder, Orland, Murray & Demattie LLC 55 Greens Farms Rd, Westport 203-222-4949 broderorland.com
ANDREW NEMIROFF
Reich and Truax 2507 Post Rd, Southport 203-254-9877 reichandtruax.com
PAUL TUSCH
EDWARD NUSBAUM
AIDAN WELSH
SARAH OLDHAM
Rutkin, Oldham & Griffin, LLC 5 Imperial Ave, Westport 203-227-7301 rutkinoldham.com
CAROLE ORLAND
Broder, Orland, Murray & Demattie LLC 55 Greens Farms Rd, Westport 203-222-4949 broderorland.com
THOMAS PARRINO
Parrino|Shattuck, PC 285 Riverside Ave, Westport 203-557-9755 parrinoshattuck.com
RACHEL PENCU
Cohen and Wolf PC 1115 Broad St, Bridgeport 203-368-0211 cohenandwolf.com
YAKOV PYETRANKER
Pyetranker, P.C. 1111 Summer St, Stamford 203-989-0997 pyetrankerpc.com
ALAN RUBENSTEIN
Halloran & Sage LLP 315 Post Rd W, Westport 203-222-4301 halloransage.com
ARNOLD RUTKIN
Rutkin, Oldham & Griffin, LLC 5 Imperial Ave, Westport 203-227-7301 rutkinoldham.com
THOMAS SHANLEY
Thomas M. Shanley, P.C. 37 Arch St, Greenwich 203-542-9391 shanleylawfirm.com
MARK SOBOSLAI
The Law Offices of Mark R. Soboslai, LLC 383 Riverside Ave, Westport
Pullman & Comley LLC 850 Main St, Bridgeport 203-330-2282 pullcom.com
LOUISE TRUAX
Fogarty Cohen Russo & Nemiroff LLC 1700 E Putnam Ave, Old Greenwich 203-661-1000 fcsn.com Law Offices of Edward Nusbaum, PC 212 Post Rd W, Westport 203-226-8181 nusbaumfamilylaw.com
AMY MURRAY
203-226-5759 marksoboslai.com
PATRICIA WEITZMAN Verrill Dana LLP 355 Riverside Ave, Westport 203-222-3116 verrill-law.com
Cacace, Tusch & Santagata 1111 Summer St, Stamford 203-327-2000 lawcts.com
IMMIGRATION LAW
Schoonmaker, George, Colin, Blomberg, Bryniczka & Welsh P.C 1700 E Putnam Ave, Old Greenwich 203-625-1873 sgbfamilylaw.com
ADAM MOCCIOLO
Pullman & Comley LLC 281 Tresser Blvd, Stamford 203-330-2128 pullcom.com
INSURANCE
GENERAL PRACTICE
JONATHAN BOWMAN
ANTHONY DEPANFILIS
Cohen and Wolf PC 1115 Broad St, Bridgeport 203-337-4135 cohenandwolf.com
DePanfilis & Vallerie LLC 25 Belden Ave, Norwalk 203-846-9585 dandvlaw.com
JOHN CANNAVINO JR
GOVERNMENT AND ADMINISTRATIVE
Ryan Ryan Deluca LLP 1000 Lafayette Blvd, Bridgeport 203-549-6621 ryandelucalaw.com
MICHAEL ANDREANA
EDWARD MCCREERY III
Pullman & Comley LLC 850 Main St, Bridgeport 203-330-2235 pullcom.com
Pullman & Comley LLC 850 Main St, Bridgeport 203-330-2216 pullcom.com
IRA BLOOM
Berchem Moses PC 1221 Post Rd E, Westport 203-227-9545 berchemmoses.com
INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY RIGHTS
MARIO COPPOLA
Berchem Moses PC 1221 Post Rd E, Westport 203-227-9545 berchemmoses.com
JED FERDINAND
Ferdinand IP 1221 Post Rd E, Westport 203-557-4224 ferdinandip.com
JESSICA KENNEDY
Pullman & Comley LLC 850 Main St, Bridgeport 203-330-2215 pullcom.com
PAUL GREELEY
HEALTHCARE LAW COLLIN BARON
Zeldes, Needle & Cooper, PC 1000 Lafayette Blvd, Bridgeport 203-332-5726 znclaw.com
LABOR AND EMPLOYMENT ROBERT BRODY
Brody and Associates LLC 120 Post Rd W, Westport 203-454-0560 brodyandassociates.com
MARK CARTA
Carta McAlister & Moore LLC 1120 Boston Post Rd, Darien 203-202-3131 cmm-law.com
RICHARD CASTIGLIONI
Diserio Martin O'Connor & Castiglioni LLP 1 Atlantic St, Stamford 203-569-1109 diseriomartin.com
LEWIS CHIMES
Law Office of Lewis Chimes LLC 45 Franklin St, Stamford 203-324-7744 chimeslaw.com
DAVID COHEN
Wofsey Rosen Kweskin & Kuriansky LLP 600 Summer St, Stamford 203-327-2300 wrkk.com
DEBORAH DEHART CANNAVINO
Epstein Becker & Green PC 1 Landmark Square, Stamford 203-326-7437 ebglaw.com
STEPHEN MCNAMARA
MARIA GARCIA-QUINTNER
Withersworldwide 1700 E Putnam Ave, Greenwich 203-302-4069 withersworldwide.com
Pullman & Comley LLC 850 Main St, Bridgeport 203-330-2280 pullcom.com
EDWARD SCOFIELD
STEVEN FREDERICK
STEVEN MOORE
STEPHEN COWHERD
Ohlandt Greeley Ruggiero & Perle, LLP 1 Landmark Square, Stamford 203-327-4500 ogrp.com
Ohlandt Greeley Ruggiero & Perle, LLP 1 Landmark Square, Stamford 203-327-4500 ogrp.com St. Onge Steward Johnston & Reens LLC 986 Bedford St, Stamford 203-324-6155 ssjr.com
Pullman & Comley LLC 850 Main St, Bridgeport 203-330-2219 pullcom.com
CHARLES RUGGIERO
Wofsey Rosen Kweskin & Kuriansky LLP 600 Summer St, Stamford 203-327-2300 wrkk.com
SCOTT LUCAS
Lucas & Varga LLC 2425 Post Rd, Southport 203-227-8400 lucasvargalaw.com
LAUREN MACDONALD Maya Murphy, P.C. 266 Post Rd E, Westport 203-221-3100 mayalaw.com
KUROSH MARJANI
Wofsey Rosen Kweskin & Kuriansky LLP 600 Summer St, Stamford 203-327-2300 wrkk.com
JOSEPH MAYA
Maya Murphy, P.C. 266 Post Rd E, Westport 203-221-3100 mayalaw.com
JONATHAN ORLEANS
Pullman & Comley LLC 850 Main St, Bridgeport 203-330-2129 pullcom.com
DAVID RINTOUL
Zeldes, Needle & Cooper, PC 1000 Lafayette Blvd, Bridgeport 203-332-5782 znclaw.com
CLAIRE RYAN
Ryan Ryan Deluca LLP 1000 Lafayette Blvd, Bridgeport 203-541-5024 ryandelucalaw.com
DANIEL SCHWARTZ Day Pitney LLP 263 Tresser Blvd, Stamford 203-977-7536 daypitney.com
MARGARET SHEAHAN
Mitchell & Sheahan, PC 999 Oronoque Ln, Stratford 203-873-0240 mitchellandsheahan.com
MARY-KATE SMITH
Law Office of Lewis Chimes LLC 45 Franklin St, Stamford 203-324-7744 chimeslaw.com
MGQ Law, LLC 246 Post Rd E, Westport 203-836-3336 mgqlaw.com
DOUGLAS VARGA
GEORGE KASPER
DANIEL YOUNG
Pullman & Comley LLC 850 Main St, Bridgeport 203-330-2119 pullcom.com
Lucas & Varga LLC 2425 Post Rd, Southport 203-227-8400 lucasvargalaw.com Wofsey Rosen Kweskin & Kuriansky LLP 600 Summer St, Stamford 203-327-2300 wrkk.com
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TOP LAWYERS in
FAIRFIELD COUNTY
ZACHARY ZEID
Pullman & Comley LLC 850 Main St, Bridgeport 203-330-2077 pullcom.com
LAND USE ENVIRONMENT LEONARD BRAMAN
Wofsey Rosen Kweskin & Kuriansky LLP 600 Summer St, Stamford 203-327-2300 wrkk.com
PAMELA ELKOW
Carmody Torrance Sandak & Hennessey LLP 707 Summer St, Stamford 203-252-2672 carmodylaw.com
LISA FEINBERG
Carmody Torrance Sandak & Hennessey LLP 707 Summer St, Stamford 203-252-2677 carmodylaw.com
WILDER GLEASON
Gleason & Associates LLC 23 Old Kings Highway S, Darien 203-655-9696 gleasonllc.com
JOHN HEAGNEY
Heagney Lennon & Slane LLP 248 Greenwich Ave, Greenwich 203-661-8400 hls248.com
WILLIAM HENNESSEY JR Carmody Torrance Sandak & Hennessey LLP 707 Summer St, Stamford 203-425-4200 carmodylaw.com
JACQUELINE KAUFMAN Carmody Torrance Sandak & Hennessey LLP 707 Summer St, Stamford 203-252-2665 carmodylaw.com
BARBARA MILLER
Brody Wilkinson PC 2507 Post Rd, Southport 203-319-7133 brodywilk.com
EDWARD O'HANLAN
Robinson and Cole 1055 Washington Blvd, Stamford 203-462-7556 rc.com
CHRISTOPHER RUSSO Russo & Rizio, LLC One Post Rd, Fairfield 203-255-9928 russorizio.com
PATRICIA SULLIVAN Cohen and Wolf PC 1115 Broad St, Bridgeport 203-337-4124 cohenandwolf.com
AUSTIN WOLF
Cohen and Wolf PC 1115 Broad St, Bridgeport 203-368-0211 cohenandwolf.com
MEDICAL MALPRACTICE DEFENSE REBECCA BRINDLEY
Stockman O'Connor Connors PLLC 10 Middle St, Bridgeport 203-220-6590 stockmanoconnor.com
JOHN COSTA
Ryan Ryan Deluca LLP 1000 Lafayette Blvd, Bridgeport 203-541-5044 ryandelucalaw.com
SALLY HAGERTY
DanaherLagnese, PC 21 Oak St, Hartford 860-247-3666 danaherlagnese.com
ILYSSA KELSON
DanaherLagnese, PC 21 Oak St, Hartford 860-247-3666 danaherlagnese.com
DANIEL RYAN III
Ryan Ryan Deluca LLP 1000 Lafayette Blvd, Bridgeport 203-541-5030 ryandelucalaw.com
ERIC STOCKMAN
Stockman O'Connor Connors PLLC 10 Middle St, Bridgeport 203-220-6533 stockmanoconnor.com
MEDICAL MALPRACTICE PLAINTIFF MARCO ALLOCCA Silver Golub & Teitell LLP 184 Atlantic St, Stamford 203-325-4491 sgtlaw.com
ADAM BLANK
Stamford 203-252-2666 carmodylaw.com
Wofsey Rosen Kweskin & Kuriansky LLP 600 Summer St, Stamford 203-327-2300 wrkk.com
WILLIAM HENNESSEY
Law Offices Of William J. Hennessey 49 Cannon St, Bridgeport 203-366-6115 bridgeportcaraccident lawyer.com
NICOLE COATES Silver Golub & Teitell LLP 184 Atlantic St, Stamford 203-325-4491 sgtlaw.com
MICHAEL KENNEDY
Silver Golub & Teitell LLP 184 Atlantic St, Stamford 203-325-4491 sgtlaw.com
PETER DREYER Silver Golub & Teitell LLP 184 Atlantic St, Stamford 203-325-4491 sgtlaw.com
BRIAN KLUBERDANZ
Wofsey Rosen Kweskin & Kuriansky LLP 600 Summer St, Stamford 203-327-2300 wrkk.com
CINDY ROBINSON
Tremont Sheldon Robinson Mahoney P.C. 64 Lyon Ter, Bridgeport 203-335-5145 tremontsheldon.com
DOUGLAS MAHONEY
Tremont Sheldon Robinson Mahoney P.C. 64 Lyon Ter, Bridgeport 203-335-5145 tremontsheldon.com
RICHARD SILVER Silver Golub & Teitell LLP 184 Atlantic St, Stamford 203-325-4491 sgtlaw.com
NEAL MOSKOW
Ury & Moskow, LLC 883 Black Rock Tpke, Fairfield 888-529-4335 urymoskow.com
NICHOLAS WOCL
JOHNPATRICK O'BRIEN
Wocl Leydon, LLC 80 4th St, Stamford 203-333-3339 woclleydon.com
Cohen and Wolf PC 1115 Broad St, Bridgeport 203-337-4113 cohenandwolf.com
ANGELO ZIOTAS Silver Golub & Teitell LLP 184 Atlantic St, Stamford 203-325-4491 sgtlaw.com
ALAN PICKEL
PERSONAL INJURY
BENJAMIN POMERANTZ
The Pickel Law Firm, LLC 1700 Bedford St, Stamford 203-348-4100 pickellaw.com Carmody Torrance Sandak & Hennessey LLP 707 Summer St, Stamford 203-252-2645 carmodylaw.com
STEWART CASPER
Casper & DeToledo LLC 1458 Bedford St, Stamford 203-325-8600 casperdetoledo.com
PAUL SLAGER
WILLIAM DAVOREN
Silver Golub & Teitell LLP 184 Atlantic St, Stamford 203-325-4491 sgtlaw.com
Wofsey Rosen Kweskin & Kuriansky LLP 600 Summer St, Stamford 203-327-2300 wrkk.com
ERNEST TEITELL
Silver Golub & Teitell LLP 184 Atlantic St, Stamford 203-325-4491 sgtlaw.com
STEPHEN FINN
Wofsey Rosen Kweskin & Kuriansky LLP 600 Summer St, Stamford 203-327-2300 wrkk.com
JEREMY VISHNO
Vishno Law Firm 183 Sherman St, Fairfield 203-256-2373 vishnolawfirm.com
KEVIN GRECO
Carmody Torrance Sandak & Hennessey LLP 707 Summer St,
PRODUCT LIABILITY
Stamford 203-327-2000 lawcts.com
JORAM HIRSCH
WILLIAM CARELLO
PROFESSIONAL MALPRACTICE NON MEDICAL DEFENSE
BRUCE COHEN
Adelman Hirsch & Connors, LLP 1000 Lafayette Blvd, Bridgeport 203-331-8888 ahctriallaw.com
KAREN ALLISON
Ryan Ryan Deluca LLP 1000 Lafayette Blvd, Bridgeport 203-541-5023 ryandelucalaw.com
DAVID ATKINS
Pullman & Comley LLC 850 Main St, Bridgeport 203-330-2103 pullcom.com
STEPHEN CONOVER
Wofsey Rosen Kweskin & Kuriansky LLP 600 Summer St, Stamford 203-327-2300 wrkk.com Fogarty Cohen Russo & Nemiroff LLC 1700 E Putnam Ave, Old Greenwich 203-661-1000 fcsn.com
JOSHUA COLE
Pullman & Comley LLC 850 Main St, Bridgeport 203-330-2217 pullcom.com
STEVEN ELBAUM
Robinson and Cole 1055 Washington Blvd, Stamford 203-462-7526 rc.com
Carmody Torrance Sandak & Hennessey LLP 707 Summer St, Stamford 203-252-2668 carmodylaw.com
GEOFFREY FAY
ROBERT LANEY
Verrill Dana LLP 355 Riverside Ave, Westport 203-222-3109 verrill-law.com
Ryan Ryan Deluca LLP 1000 Lafayette Blvd, Bridgeport 203-541-5010 ryandelucalaw.com
MARCY STOVALL
Pullman & Comley LLC 850 Main St, Bridgeport 203-674-7976 pullcom.com
REGINA FLAHERTY
MARSHALL GOLDBERG
Pullman & Comley LLC 850 Main St, Bridgeport 203-330-2104 pullcom.com
Wofsey Rosen Kweskin & Kuriansky LLP 600 Summer St, Stamford 203-327-2300 wrkk.com
SUZANNE SUTTON
STEVEN GRUSHKIN
REAL ESTATE
DONALD GUSTAFSON
Cohen and Wolf PC 1115 Broad St, Bridgeport 203-368-0211 cohenandwolf.com
MICHAEL BYRNE
Day Pitney LLP 263 Tresser Blvd, Stamford 203-977-7349 daypitney.com
MICHAEL BYRNE
Byrne and O'Neill LLP 112 Prospect St, Stamford 203-327-7561 bonlaw.com
MICHAEL CACACE Cacace, Tusch & Santagata 1111 Summer St,
Wofsey Rosen Kweskin & Kuriansky LLP 600 Summer St, Stamford 203-327-2300 wrkk.com Shipman & Goodwin LLP 300 Atlantic St, Stamford 203-324-8103 shipmangoodwin.com
PATRICK HANNA
Carmody Torrance Sandak & Hennessey LLP 707 Summer St, Stamford 203-252-2667 carmodylaw.com
MICHAEL HINTON Cummings & Lockwood LLC 6 Landmark Sq, Stamford
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TOP LAWYERS in
FAIRFIELD COUNTY
Westport 203-226-1001 bertralaw.com
Darien 203-202-3110 cmm-law.com
203-330-2133 pullcom.com
Hoekenga & Machado, LLC 193 Main St, Danbury 203-792-3300 hdmlegal.com
DAVID KURATA
MICHAEL MURRAY
Russo & Rizio, LLC One Post Rd, Fairfield 203-255-9928 russorizio.com
JEREMY KAYE
CHARLES MARTIN III
203-351-4492 cl-law.com
CRAIG HOEKENGA II
Kaye and Hennessey, LLC 71 Lewis St, Greenwich 203-625-5300 kayehenlaw.com
LISA KENT
Lisa Kent Attorney At Law 2425 Post Rd, Southport 203-955-1313 lkentlaw.com
MARK KIRSCH
Cohen and Wolf PC 1115 Broad St, Bridgeport 203-337-4254 cohenandwolf.com
HOWARD KOMISAR
Berkowitz Trager and Trager LLC 8 Wright St,
Russo & Rizio, LLC One Post Rd, Fairfield 203-255-9928 russorizio.com Robinson and Cole 1055 Washington Blvd, Stamford 203-462-7522 rc.com
KATHLEEN MERRIGAN
MICHAEL ROSTEN
Russo & Rizio, LLC 2507 Post Rd, Southport 203-254-7579 russorizio.com
MICHAEL PROCTOR
JONATHAN MILLS
ROBERT RAHILLY
GLEN MOORE
Carta McAlister & Moore LLC 1120 Boston Post Rd,
Cohen and Wolf PC 320 Post Rd W, Westport 203-341-5330 cohenandwolf.com
LEAH PARISI
Cummings & Lockwood LLC 2 Greenwich Plz, Greenwich 203-863-6506 cl-law.com
Cummings & Lockwood LLC 6 Landmark Sq, Stamford 203-351-4100 cl-law.com
RAYMOND RIZIO
Ivey, Barnum & O'Mara, LLC 161 Cherry St, New Canaan 203-966-1492 ibolaw.com
ROBERT RUSSO
Russo & Rizio, LLC 2507 Post Rd, Southport 203-254-7579 russorizio.com
Pullman & Comley LLC 850 Main St, Bridgeport 203-330-2145 pullcom.com
Berkowitz Trager and Trager LLC 8 Wright St, Westport 203-226-1001 bertralaw.com
ROBERT SISCA
MARY BETH RAPICE
MICHAEL SWEENEY
RICHARD DIMARCO
Carmody Torrance Sandak & Hennessey LLP 707 Summer St, Stamford 203-252-2690 carmodylaw.com
SECURITIES LAW RICHARD SLAVIN
Cohen and Wolf PC 320 Post Rd W, Westport 203-341-5310 cohenandwolf.com
MICHAEL RUEDA
Withersworldwide 430 Park Ave, New York 203-302-4087 withersworldwide.com
TAX LAW
Law Offices of Robert Vincent Sisca & Associates, LLC 32 Field Point Rd,
Pullman & Comley LLC 850 Main St, Bridgeport
Fairfield 203-254-1118 btlawfirm.com
SPORTS LAW
STEVEN SIEGELAUB
Day Pitney LLP 263 Tresser Blvd, Stamford 203-977-7304 daypitney.com
Greenwich 203-629-3831 lorvs.com
SAMUEL BRAUNSTEIN Braunstein and Todisco PC 1 Eliot Place,
Cohen and Wolf PC 320 Post Rd W, Westport 203-341-5301 cohenandwolf.com
BRETT DIXON
Finn Dixon & Herling LLP 6 Landmark Sq, Stamford 203-325-5016 fdh.com
LESLIE GRODD
Halloran & Sage LLP 315 Post Rd W, Westport 203-222-4306 halloransage.com
WONCHI JU
Withersworldwide 157 Church St, New Haven 203-974-0325 withersworldwide.com
WILLIAM KAMBAS
Withersworldwide 1700 E Putnam Ave, Greenwich 203-974-0313 withersworldwide.com
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TOP LAWYERS in
FAIRFIELD COUNTY
DAVID LEHN
Withersworldwide 1700 E Putnam Ave, Greenwich 203-302-4077 withersworldwide.com
D MORRIS
Pullman & Comley LLC 850 Main St, Bridgeport 203-330-2109 pullcom.com
KELLY O'DONNELL
Pullman & Comley LLC 850 Main St, Bridgeport 203-330-2264 pullcom.com
EDWARD RENN
Withersworldwide 1700 E Putnam Ave, Greenwich 203-974-0343 withersworldwide.com
CARA SANTORO Cummings & Lockwood LLC 6 Landmark Sq, Stamford 203-351-4195 cl-law.com
SHAUNA SARNO
Withersworldwide 157 Church St, New Haven 203-974-0433 withersworldwide.com
TECHNOLOGY VIRTUAL RUSSELL ANDERSON
Pullman & Comley LLC 850 Main St, Bridgeport 203-330-2271 pullcom.com
WILLS DOUGLAS BROWN
Brody Wilkinson PC 2507 Post Rd, Southport 203-319-7119 brodywilk.com
DAVID BUSSOLOTTA
Pullman & Comley LLC 850 Main St, Bridgeport 203-330-2223 pullcom.com
MICHAEL CLEAR
Wiggin and Dana LLP 30 Milbank Ave, Greenwich 203-363-7675 wiggin.com
LAUREN DAVIES
Pullman & Comley LLC 850 Main St, Bridgeport 203-330-2076 pullcom.com
B DELANY
Cummings & Lockwood LLC 2 Greenwich Plz, Greenwich 203-863-6554 cl-law.com
MARGARET DELUCA
Cummings & Lockwood LLC 6 Landmark Sq, Stamford 203-351-4298 cl-law.com
JAMES DOUGHERTY
Withersworldwide 1700 E Putnam Ave, Greenwich 203-974-0333 withersworldwide.com
ELIZABETH FALKOFF Russo & Rizio, LLC 2507 Post Rd, Southport 203-254-7579 russorizio.com
DANIEL FITZGERALD Cummings & Lockwood LLC 2 Greenwich Plz, Greenwich 203-863-6511 cl-law.com
JAMES FUNNELL JR
Brody Wilkinson PC 2507 Post Rd, Southport 203-226-6552 brodywilk.com
JESSIE GILBERT
Cummings & Lockwood LLC 2 Greenwich Plz, Greenwich 203-863-6503 cl-law.com
GREGORY HAYES
Day Pitney LLP 263 Tresser Blvd, Stamford 203-977-7365 daypitney.com
JEVERA HENNESSEY Kaye and Hennessey, LLC 71 Lewis St, Greenwich 203-625-5300 kayehenlaw.com
DAVID HERMENZE
Brody Wilkinson PC 2507 Post Rd, Southport 203-226-6552 brodywilk.com
LEONARD LEADER
Wiggin and Dana LLP 60 Church Ln, Westport 203-363-7602 wiggin.com
EDWARD MARCANTONIO Brody Wilkinson PC 2507 Post Rd,
Southport 203-226-6552 brodywilk.com
203-222-3118 verrill-law.com
203-254-5008 pullcom.com
ALESSANDRA MESSINEO LONG
CONSTANCE SHIELDS
Withersworldwide 1700 E Putnam Ave, Greenwich 203-974-0418 withersworldwide.com
LUKE TASHJIAN
The Law Offices of Alessandra Messineo Long 34 Field Rd, Riverside 203-249-3601 amlonglaw.com
Whitman Breed Abbott & Morgan LLC 500 W Putnam Ave, Greenwich 203-862-2311 whitmanbreed.com
AMY WILFERT
Smith & Grant LLP 9 Greenwich Office Park, Greenwich 203-661-1110 smithgrant.com
AMY TODISCO
KAREN YATES
GRETA SOLOMON
HOWARD TUTHILL III
GEORGE SMITH
PETER MOTT
Brody Wilkinson PC 2507 Post Rd, Southport 203-319-7136 brodywilk.com
Cohen and Wolf PC 1115 Broad St, Bridgeport 203-337-4114 cohenandwolf.com
JOHN MUSICARO JR
Cummings & Lockwood LLC 6 Landmark Sq, Stamford 203-351-4343 cl-law.com
JAMES STEWART
Pullman & Comley LLC 850 Main St, Bridgeport
STEPHEN NAPIER
Berkowitz Trager and Trager LLC 8 Wright St, Westport 203-226-1001 bertralaw.com
Greenwich 203-863-6590 cl-law.com
Braunstein and Todisco PC 1 Eliot Place, Fairfield 203-254-1118 btlawfirm.com Cummings & Lockwood LLC 6 Landmark Sq, Stamford 203-351-4308 cl-law.com
LAURA WEINTRAUB BECK Cummings & Lockwood LLC 2 Greenwich Plz,
Day Pitney LLP 24 Field Point Rd, Greenwich 203-862-7811 daypitney.com Withersworldwide 157 Church St, New Haven 203-974-0355 withersworldwide.com
WORKER'S COMPENSATION MEG LYON
Hoekenga & Machado, LLC 193 Main St, Danbury 203-792-3300 hdmlegal.com G
METHODOLOGY: To create the list, the magazine contracted DataJoe Research to facilitate an online peer-voting process and Internet research process. DataJoe Research is a software and research company specializing in data collection and verification, and conducts various nominations across the United States on behalf of publishers. To create the list, DataJoe Research facilitated an online peer-voting process. We paired this with an Internet research process to identify success characteristics. DataJoe checked and confirmed that each published winner had, at time of review, a current, active license status with the appropriate state regulatory board. If we were not able to find evidence of a lawyer's current, active registration with the state regulatory board, that lawyer was excluded from the list. In addition, we checked available public sources to identify lawyers disciplined for an infraction by the state regulatory board. These entities were excluded from the list. Finally, DataJoe presented the tallied result to the magazine for its final review and adjustments. Final note We recognize that there are many good lawyers who are not shown in this representative list. This is only a sampling of the huge array of talented professionals within the region. Inclusion in the list is based on the opinions of responding lawyers in the region. We take time and energy to ensure fair voting, although we understand that the results of this survey nomination and Internet research campaign are not an objective metric. We certainly do not discount the fact that many, many good and effective lawyers may not appear on the list.
DOUGLAS OLIN
Cummings & Lockwood LLC 2 Greenwich Plz, Greenwich 203-863-6504 cl-law.com
JOSEPH PANKOWSKI JR Wofsey Rosen Kweskin & Kuriansky LLP 600 Summer St, Stamford 203-327-2300 wrkk.com
JENNIFER PORT Ivey, Barnum & O'Mara, LLC 170 Mason St, Greenwich 203-661-6000 ibolaw.com
EDWARD RODENBACH Cummings & Lockwood LLC 2 Greenwich Plz, Greenwich 203-863-6551 cl-law.com
RICHARD SARNER
Richard A. Sarner of Zeldes, Needle & Cooper, PC 263 Tresser Blvd, Stamford 833-332-8670 sarnerlaw.com
DISCLAIMER DataJoe uses best practices and exercises great care in assembling content for this list. DataJoe does not warrant that the data contained within the list are complete or accurate. DataJoe does not assume, and hereby disclaims, any liability to any person for any loss or damage caused by errors or omissions herein whether such errors or omissions result from negligence, accident, or any other cause. All rights reserved. No commercial use of the information in this list may be made without written permission from DataJoe.
GREGORY SAUM
The Law Office of Gregory A. Saum, LLC 1281 E Main St, Stamford 203-340-9945 saumlaw.com
SHARON SCHWEITZER Verrill Dana LLP 355 Riverside Ave, Westport
Questions? For research/methodology questions, contact the research team at surveys@datajoe.com.
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A-List_2
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On the Bright Side
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REAL ESTATE
2021 by l iz ba rron
CONTRIBUTED
WE ALREADY KNOW HOW DESIRABLE OUR CHARMING LITTLE TOWNS ARE, BUT TODAY, REAL ESTATE IS BOOMING LIKE WE’VE NEVER SEEN
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Homes like this one in New Canaan, listed for nearly $4 million by William Pitt Sotheby's, are getting lots of interested buyers coming from New York.
To say that Fairfield County’s real estate market had a surge in 2020 would be an understatement. When Covid-19 swept through New York City last spring, thousands of residents began looking to relocate—and quickly. New Canaan, Darien and Rowayton have always been eyed by buyers from Manhattan seeking the quaint luxuries of small New England-like towns but the extreme draw to suburban life over the past year was like nothing most realtors had ever seen. From young families to older residents, being close to the city but not in the city became a priority, seemingly overnight. The influx from 2019 to 2020 meant that home sales increased a whopping 60 percent in New Canaan, 55 percent in Darien and 30 percent in Rowayton.
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As part of what seemed to be a mass exodus from Manhattan many potential buyers were in such a rush to get to Connecticut that they either signed leases for short-term rentals or moved in with family members already living here. Having more space, privacy and a backyard quickly became the new priority for those who had been confined to their city apartments. Last year the story was quite different, most buyers had very specific wish lists for their homes and things like proximity to town and schools were key factors in what they wanted. “The lack of inventory helped our buyers to explore possibilities that they may have overlooked in the past,” explains Gillian DePalo, vice president of sales in William Raveis’ New Canaan office. “They didn’t confine themselves to one location or concept. The privacy and land offered just a little farther from town became something that new buyers more readily considered, once remote work flexibility seemed to be here to stay.”
NEW CANAAN
363
Properties Sold in 2020 (214 sold in 2019)
$1.43 million Median Sale Price
Good News Unit sales were up 60 percent in 2020 from 2019 with 363 homes sold versus 214. The average number of days on the market was the lowest it has been since 2015.
A HOME FOR ALL THE THINGS “Spending so much more time at home dramatically changed the ways that people are using their houses,” said Deirdre McGovern, a realtor in William Raveis’ Darien office. Open floor concepts have become less popular and having smaller rooms that offer privacy for work and school are key. Homes with more than one home office have also become a priority for many buyers. And, looking at what once would have been a first-floor guest room often became just that, according to Jeff Kelly, office manager, at Houlihan Lawrence in Darien. Still having space for visitors to come and safely visit has become more important than ever and the interest in in-law suites peaked among buyers. Having space to prioritize wellness and home
fitness also moved to the top of everyone’s lists. Buyers who once had their Pelotons in the living room of their small apartments were looking for finished basements that could be turned into gyms. “Features like saunas, steam showers, built-in air purifiers, green systems, state-of-the art water filtration and a host of other examples became increasingly important in 2020,” says DePalo. Properties with more land quickly became coveted as outdoor living and socializing at home began happening more than ever before. Having enough space for things like firepits and patio heaters was crucial. Entertaining outside at home also peaked the desire for things like outdoor kitchens and pizza ovens. Buyers who once may not have spent much time at home in their backyards were suddenly interested in having room for vegetable gardens and greenhouses. Swimming pools, which once didn’t mean much to buyers, “became the ‘must have’ feature of the 2020 market,’ says DePalo. Additional features like tennis and basketball courts became highly sought after as everyone was seeking to not only have homes that provided comfort, but also the ability to continue enjoying the activities they loved in safe ways. Transitional spaces like mudrooms and porches have also become more important to buyers as they aided in helping to keep homes germ-free. Having a place to remove shoes, jackets and face masks quickly became a highly sought-after feature that once may have been taken for granted or unused all together.
WILLIAM RAVEIS
FLEXIBILITY IS KEY
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REAL ESTATE
2021
OPPOSITE PAGE: William Raveis' agents sold this home at 400 South Ave., in New Canaan for $3.39 million. THIS PAGE: (above
and right) New construction homes with modern kitchens and sophisticated finishes and amenities are selling fast. (below) Home gyms are a major bonus for buyers looking to move to town.
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WATER VIEWS, PLEASE
MOVING FAST While houses continue to fly off the market with the demand being so high and supply being so low, presentation still matters. “Buyers were still savvy, and homes needed to be priced correctly and look a certain way; fresh, clean and organized are what they wanted to see”, said Lynley Middleberg, brokerage manager, William Pitt Sotheby’s International Realty’s Darien and Rowayton office. The need for full staging may have decreased but homes still needed to be prepared for sale and showings. Small updates like fresh paint, new hinges and curb appeal can go a long way. Virtual showings increased drastically at the beginning of 2020 as sellers didn’t want strangers in their houses nor did buyers want to be in a stranger’s house. By the end of the year, however, with increased Covid-friendly protocols in place, showings and open houses were back in action. “Transactions usually occur in pairs and in this market, you need to know where you’re going to go before you sell. In the old days people would buy first and then sell, but because of the nature of the market the order has become inverted,” says Kelly.
New Canaan, Darien and Rowayton all saw an uptick of “in town movement” during 2020. “Buyers were taking advantage of the increased price they could get for their house and trading up,” said McGovern. The draw toward living near the water was never stronger and waterfront properties sold at an all-time high. Inventory, on the other hand, was at an all-time low, but it wasn’t only due to the level of demand. Many potential sellers, who were once empty nesters, delayed their plans to move because they found themselves with their adult children living back at home. Buyers who were serious about moving needed to make decisions more quickly than ever in such a seller-heavy market riddled with bidding wars.
ROWAYTON
60
Properties Sold in 2020 (48 sold in 2019)
$1.37 million Median Sale Price Good News Average sale price rose by 14.9 percent, increasing to $1.52 million in 2020 from $1.23 million the prior year.
SUBURBAN APPEAL The rental market peaked last spring and Fairfield County real estate saw leasing prices that it had never seen before, “people were sometimes signing leases, site unseen,” says Middleberg. Many residents from New York City were just so anxious to get out of the city that they took on new rentals in Connecticut while also keeping their Manhattan leases since there was so much uncertainty about the future. The market also saw clients who had planned to move to the area in the future and expedited their plans due to the spread of the pandemic but weren’t ready to purchase just yet. The summer also saw an influx of renters looking to spend a few months in the suburbs, many of which either extended their leases or ended up becoming buyers.
DARIEN
416
Properties Sold in 2020 (259 sold in 2019)
$1.45 million Median Sale Price Good News Median sale price rose by 13.2 percent, increasing to $1.45 million in 2020 from $1.28 million the prior year. The number of homes sold in 2020 was 54.6 percent higher than in 2019, increasing from 269 to 416.
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REAL ESTATE
2021
ABOVE: Outdoor living with pools and large expansive properties are what buyers are continuing to look for. BELOW: Waterfront homes in Darien sold at an all-time high in 2020.
CONTRIBUTED
LOOKING AHEAD According to the National Association of Realtors, the uptick in housing transactions will likely continue through the spring market as most economists remain cautiously optimistic. The lack of inventory continues to drive buyer interest as supply is currently down nearly 60 percent. Realtors haven’t seen such a lack in inventory in a very long time, says DePalo. Purchasers in 2021 with the ability to buy before selling are at a significant advantage in this market, another new trend.
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by malia mckinnon fr ame photo gr aphy by jane beiles
t r e a s u r e An immaculately restored HISTORIC NEW CANAAN HOME gets the interior update it deserves
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The dining room showcases the epitome of Grandmillenial style with vibrant colors and patterns mixed with collected antiques.
he truth of the matter is that not many people get to purchase their dream home and decorate it to perfection with their oldest childhood friend. Such was the luck of Kim Delgado when she purchased a historic Federal Colonial home dating back to 1863. Believe it or not, Delgado grew up—literally—a stone’s throw away from this home, and when she and her husband decided to put in an offer she wrote a letter to the owners promising to protect the integrity of the house if they became the owners. “Knowing that this home had been painstakingly restored and renovated by the former family, I promised we wouldn’t change a thing structurally,” she says. True to her word, the home’s original footprint still exists as does the trim, floor, mouldings, even the brass hardware. The minute she took ownership, Delgado picked up the phone and called her best friend, Whitney Cole. “I called Whitney and told her that I bought my forever home and it could handle a lot of decorating,” she laughs. Cole, who grew up in New Canaan but currently resides in Charleston, South Carolina where she’s a partner at Beauregard Designs, was thrilled. “Our families are the closest of friends, and Kim and I have known each other since first grade. We were so excited to collaborate on this gorgeous home,” she says. >>
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above: A clean white entry is accessorized with stunning artwork and colorful antique vases for pops of color.. left: The bright pink color in the living room set the tone for the design throughout the entire home. The living room was also made to be family-friendly with a tv and built-ins created to look like they are original to the home.
I wanted it to look like her grandmother decorated this house but in a fun current way... It needed to be colorful and vibrant but also be able to hold up to a family with four kids. —whitney cole, designer
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Cole flew up to New Canaan with a suitcase full of fabric samples and spent the day with Delgado making some big decisions. “Whitney has incredible style. She steered the course, and we were completely in sync,” remembers Delgado. Both women decided that this alreadyelegant home needed to be updated Grandmillenial-style. This term refers to a movement where younger clients adopt interiors reminiscent of older, traditional
styles, often translating into lots of color, patterned fabrics, wallpaper, fringe, really anything nostalgic. “I told Kim I wanted it to look like her grandmother decorated this house but in a fun current way,” explains Cole. “Our vision was to bring this stunning home back to life and give it its due. It needed to be colorful and vibrant but also be able to hold up to a family with four kids,” she adds. Delgado and Cole ran with this trend, and the result is a current, glamorous home brimming
with brightness, texture and interesting furnishings. The two life-long friends describe this process as seamless and easy. “Kim had so many incredible family antiques and pieces that had been collected over the years, so we used her current furnishings and bought a few new pieces,” says Cole. Delgado says of Cole, “She makes fun of me that I could open a chair store in my basement, I’ve got so much inventory.” Where does one start in a house with so much potential? Cole’s strategy was to make a
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splash in the living room—the first room one sees from the pretty, white subdued foyer—by painting it in “Bachelor’s Button,” a very pink Ralph Lauren hue that’s been around for ages. “The color made a statement and set the tone for the whole house,” she says. “This is the room where we spend most of our time, and we made it more family-friendly by adding a TV and consigning carpenter George Farrington to make some gorgeous built-in bookshelves that mimic the original trim of the arched doorways,” says Delgado. Given this room is a high-traffic area, Cole chose a Stark leopard and rose-print rug made of easy-to-clean wool (FYI, this same exact rug pattern was used as a stair runner in Delgado’s childhood home), and the sofa fabric is a high-performance emerald green velvet, so spills aren’t a problem. Cole recovered a pair of Delgado’s old Bergere chairs in a custom quadrille fabric, and the throw pillows and drapes were done in
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left: The Delgado family gathered in the kitchen. From left: Stanley, Kim holding Stuart, Chappy, Scott and Mary Rose. below: The French pastry table in the kitchen doubles as an island and was once used as the kitchen table in the home Kim grew up in. opposite page: The study was made to be a cozy, warm, sophisticated space.
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Whitney helped me to wake up this house and bring it back to what it always was—a place full of kids. She infused a youthful vibrancy into our home, but also helped me to achieve my goal to be happy in each and every room. —kim delgado, homeowner
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In my childhood bedroom I had all matching curtains, bedding and wallpaper. —kim delgado, homeowner
Schumacher’s whimsical “Yangtze River” print. An abstract woodcut print by an Australian artist hangs over the fireplace and was sourced, like most of the home’s artwork, from Heather Gaudio Fine Art in town. In the dining room, the main thoroughfare between the living room and kitchen, there was another opportunity to use a fun color. Originally, the room had white wainscoting but once the stunning blue Iksel chinoiserie wallpaper was installed, Delgado and Cole decided to punch it up and paint the wood
paneling and French doors in a pale blue color. “This unified the space and made it so much warmer, welcoming and casual,” says Delgado. The Gustavian Swedish-style crystal chandelier is by David Iatesta, and the floors are hand-painted in a classic diagonal check by local artist Shelly Denning, a twist on typical black and white marble check flooring. The classic English antique table and Sheraton chairs were Delgado’s grandmother’s, and the buffet was found at the Greenwich Antiques Store in Stamford. A pair of custom console
tables are covered in a zig zag Brunschwig & Fils silk fabric. “The paint color and handpainted floor offset the traditional furniture and make this a beautiful, formal room that doesn’t feel stuffy,” notes Cole. When it came to the kitchen, all Delgado had to say was, “We did not touch it when it came to decor.” A French pastry table with barley turned legs doubles as an island, the kitchen table was from Kim’s house growing up, and Cole laminated a fun Carlton V fabric for the Country Swedish-style kitchen chairs.
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above: Bright busy fabrics fill the primary bedroom, which Delgado calls her “sanctuary.” left: The oldest daughter’s bedroom is personalized with pink and white monogram Matouk bed linens and more bold wallpaper and matching fabrics.
“It’s a totally childproofed room,” she says. The study is a warm, sophisticated space and one of Cole’s favorite rooms. “We had the sofa custom made and covered in a gorgeous Katie Leede bird print fabric, and we based the room off that,” says Cole. The original pine walls were painted a subtle green, sconces switched out and a custom pine green mohair ottoman was added for chic effect. The design duo went super bold with the bedrooms. “In my childhood room I had all matching curtains, bedding and wallpaper,” remembers Delgado, and so all the bedrooms in this house followed suit. Bright, busy fabrics pop in each room, and bed linens sourced from Matouk are personalized with
monograms. Cole chose fabrics from boutique design companies such as Katie Ridder and English designer Charlotte Gaisford for many of the bedrooms, as she loves to support small businesses. “We chose Gaisford’s Countess Print wallpaper, brand new at the time, for one of the rooms and were the first American clients to order it,” Cole remembers. In the primary bedroom, the ceilings are high and the windows enormous, so Cole choose a gorgeous bold floral pattern for the curtains and bedskirt by GP&J Baker. Most nights, after everyone’s gone to bed, you’ll find Delgado reading in her cozy sitting room, just off the bedroom, with pinstriped upholstered walls and a pair of unique tassel lamps by Colleen
and Company. “It’s my sanctuary,” she says. As far as the exterior of the home, it stays true to the theme and remains unchanged from the previous owner. “It’s painted a historic beige color that suits the house so nicely and compliments the stonework,” Delgado says. Looking back, the homeowner muses that this project was so ideal because she got to spend time with an old friend and breathe new life into a beautiful piece of history. “Whitney helped me wake up this house and bring it back to what it always was—a place full of kids,” Delgado says. “She infused a youthful vibrancy into our home, but also helped me achieve my goal to be happy in each and every room.”
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A F T E R A Y E A R O F SO C I A L D I STA N C I N G , H O M EOW N E R S A R E E M BA R K I N G O N STAYCAT I O N S I N T H E I R OW N BAC KYA R D S , W H E R E T H E Y ’ R E F R E E TO E N T E RTA I N SA F E LY A N D R EC O N N ECT W I T H N AT U R E
ALEGRA ANDERSON
BY TOM CONNOR
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In Greenwich, James Doyle created a comfortable outdoor entertaining and dining space, complete with a reflecting pool.
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THIS SPRING, THE “GREAT OUTDOORS” PROMISES TO BE EVEN GREATER—OR AT LEAST MORE WIDELY USED AND ENJOYED—THAN PERHAPS AT ANY OTHER TIME IN MORE THAN A CENTURY. Thanks to a wealth of landscape design talent in our area, we’re able to shelter not only in place, but also in great comfort, safety and style. A number of the top architects, landscape architects and contractors in the county have created outdoor rooms for a range of functions in much the same way interior designers lay out indoor spaces. And in reconsidering the very idea of residential property, they’re expanding the outdoor living season from earliest spring to latest fall. The coronavirus pandemic has had at least one positive effect. “Home has become a refuge for many people,” says Ryan Raveis, copresident of William Raveis Inc. “In essence, they’re investing in their homes, and they’re enjoying life more in the place where they live.” Investment in property has helped fuel the hottest residential real estate market in decades, raising the average selling price by 20 percent. Real estate agencies in the county report as much as a 100 percent increase in business from this time last year. “Part of the story has got to be New York buyers coming to Connecticut,” notes Paul Breunich, president and CEO of William Pitt and Julia B. Fee Sotheby’s International Realty, headquartered in Stamford. “They’re looking for more land, for lower density of population, for security. They’re flooding the market and demand is far exceeding supply.” Yet even homeowners already settled in Fairfield County are trading out, if not up, for more space and more opportunities to live out of doors for as long as possible.
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n Rowayton, a couple with young children hired RAC Architecture + Design to design a new shingle-style contemporary in the beach association area that would take advantage of the property’s natural resources and the neighborhood’s active lifestyle. “The clients really embraced the idea of entertaining outside,” says David LaPierre, a partner in the Westport firm. “They’re into the home as a sanctuary—they wanted to keep their kids close to them and have kids from the neighborhood come over and play.” The 6,200-square-foot house is all about the outdoors. At the back, an open porch with ample seating is warmed yearround by a fireplace and Infratech electric heaters embedded in the ceiling. Large sections of glass
a pool, hot tub, firepit and a full outdoor kitchen with grill, refrigerator, ice machine, sink and stainless-steel storage cabinets. The owners of a modern Tudor mansion in the Belle Haven section of Greenwich called James Doyle Design Associates to
in the interior dining room slide into pockets in the walls, and tall glass panels in the adjacent family room fold back, opening the interior to the exterior. There, steps from the house, are enough amenities to keep kids at home and guests angling for invitations:
create a series of exterior rooms for dining and entertaining. The property falls away dramatically from the back of the house, leaving relatively little useable space, but that didn’t limit the landscape architect. “You don’t need huge spaces to have well-designed, wellfurnished, intimate outdoor spaces,” James Doyle explains. After leveling the land with tiered steps, he created a long, narrow patio that’s still roomy enough for a dinner table, two seating areas, a reflecting pool with feeder stream and a firepit carved out of a single piece of bluestone. An outdoor living room in Rowayton with fireplace designed by RAC Architecture + Design is made for yearround comfort and entertaining.
THIS PAGE: WOODRUFF BROWN PHOTOGRAPHY; OPPOSITE PAGE: ALEGRA ANDERSON
EXTERIOR DESIGN
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GRILLING ALFRESCO
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rilling has evolved since our ancestors first threw a mastodon steak on the firepit some 800,000 years ago (give or take a few hundred thousand). Since then, the “kitchen” has moved from the home cave to the great outdoors. “Outdoor kitchens have always been popular,” says Dave Marsillio Sr. at Marsillios Appliances in Fairfield, “but now, with families being home much more due to Covid-19, they are looking to utilize more of their property.” Cooking outside can range from a basic grill or firepit to a covered patio, tiki bar or pool cabana. In these areas, customers are focusing on better equipment and higher-end units, just as they have inside the house.” (Last year, the company installed over 30 high-end units.) Outdoor kitchens have also been steadily moving away from the house, notably to pool houses and cabanas. There, they’re likely to be accessorized with fireplaces or firepits, and embedded lighting and electric heating elements in the ceilings and supporting beams. A popular
request for these structures this spring, according to contractors, is outdoor pizza ovens. “Architecturally and aesthetically, the pizza oven has become a focal point of outdoor living,” says Kevin Ambrosio of Ambrosio Landscape Solutions. “Restaurants have been installing brick pizza ovens and people want to recreate that at home. They’re also a reason for having friends over. Every week I’m meeting with someone who wants one.” In Redding, he designed a cabana with pizza oven over a massive stone fireplace—a destination and dining experience that draw family members as well as guests without ever leaving home. High-end outdoor kitchens— from brands like Viking, Lynx and Dynamic Cooking Systems—can run from $5,000 to $25,000 and above when adding stonework and what today are almost standard features: grills with smokers, heating trays and side burners; refrigerators, ice-makers and sinks; heaters and night lighting.
Outdoor pizza ovens like this one designed by Ambrosio Landscape Solutions are in higher demand than ever.
HOME IS WHERE THE HEARTH IS
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Firepits of all shapes and sizes, like this one designed by Robert Cardello, are a hit for those looking for some drama (and heat) in their outdoor spaces.
CONTRIBUTED
eat in any form can extend the outdoor living season by a month or more on either side of summer. Given the chill of a winter of uncertainty and anxiety, warmth of any kind is welcome this spring.
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BACK TO THE GARDEN
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GARDEN BY NEIL LANDINO; FIREPIT BY DANIEL MILSTEIN PHOTOGRAPHY
little over a century ago, in the wake of World War I and in the midst of the Spanish flu, Americans planted war or victory Gardens for self-sufficiency but also out of patriotic duty. This season, landscape architects and professional gardeners report a resurgence of interest in suburban gardening and in simply getting back to nature. The benefits can be bountiful. “Spending time outdoors is a great way to take off stress,” says James Doyle of James Doyle Design Associates in Greenwich. “It’s nice for people to have their phones turned off and just relax.” Homeowners in Fairfield County are asking for pollinator plantings and pathways that attract butterflies, bees and songbirds as well as provide meditative spaces. They’re also interested in spending less time in the produce section of supermarkets and more time outside.
Outdoor fireplaces are bringing the warmth of the indoors to backyards, often in dramatic fashion. Overlooking Candlewood Lake in Danbury, Kevin Ambrosio of Ambrosio Landscape Solutions designed a spacious exterior family room—complete with grill, refrigerator, wide-screen television and comfortable seating—around a brick and stone fireplace, all set in a high stonewall with upper trellis. But firepits may be the hotter items on the backyard wish-list this season, and for a number of reasons: They’re relatively inexpensive; they can be sited anywhere on a property; with a few seats drawn up around them, they become instant and welcoming
James Doyle Design Associates often creates gardens like this one for clients looking to relax and de-stress.
“The benefits go beyond the taste of the vegetables you grow,” notes John Carlson of Homefront Farmers in Wilton. The company designs, builds and maintains organic vegetable gardens in Connecticut and New York. “It’s about the satisfaction of the experience.” The first step in planning a vegetable garden is determining
where on your property crops have the best chances of growing. “When you create a new garden you want to start with a lawn area or field in full sun,” says Jack Disbrow a formal gardener in Wilton who makes and maintains residential gardens. “You’ll need at least six hours, but since Connecticut tends to be damp and damp means mold, the more sun
gathering spots; and they extend outdoor living for all but the bitterest winter days and nights. Back in Rowayton, a 16-foot-long firepit across from the swimming pool’s transparent outer wall illuminates and warms the lineup of low, soft seating between it and the pool. In Darien, a heated bluestone path leads from the back of a 6,000-square-foot house to an outdoor spa so that family members and guests can walk barefoot even in winter. Beyond the spa is a large, circular, stonewalled room with firepit that is used year-round by a family that spends the coldest months playing hockey on a pond at the
bottom of the property. Molly O’Brien Watkins in the Darien office of William Pitt Sotheby International listed the property for a family that had the house built for outdoor entertaining. Polly Hickox of William Raveis Real Estate in Darien sold it to a New York family looking for…a yard. Custom-designed firepits, including masonry work, can cost $4,000 for wood-burning units and as much as $6,500 for gas-burning. Outdoor fireplaces cost considerably more, from $15,000, by Ambrosio’s estimate, to $25,000.
the better.” From there, it’s a matter of homeowners learning about their soil, when to plant which vegetables, and how best to feed, mulch and weed. Or, as with most other aspects of creating outdoor spaces, experts like John Carlson or Jack Disbrow are available to do the spadework, leaving us to harvest the fruits of their labor.
Molly O'Brien Watkins in the Darien real estate office of William Pitt Sotheby says that homes with outdoor entertaining spaces have major sales appeal,.
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Austin Ganim Landscape Design in Fairfield created a border wall and bed of perennials and annuals that bloom throughout the season to add interest around the pool and spa.
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he hottest commodities this season are swimming pools and spas. Both are typically in demand this time of year, contractors say, but what has changed this spring is the number of people demanding them. “We’re usually booked two to four months in advance, but as of the end of last September we are booked out a year, and that has never ever happened before in the pool industry,” says Tim Meehan at Meehan & Ramos Pools in Stratford. “And that’s happening because four walls are four walls, no matter if they’re in a 10,000-square-foot house or 2,000-square-foot house. People have to get outside and there’s no greater outside experience than a swimming pool.” Cool pool and spa features this
season include seamless edges, automatic covers, smart lighting and remote controls, outbuildings like pool houses and pergolas, and small dipping pools—“cocktail pools” or “spools,” as they’re being called. On the Rowayton Beach Association site, the rear of the property slopes precipitously down to the beach. To provide useable family space, LaPierre and firm founder Robert Cardello created two flat tiers for entertaining, exercising and relaxing. On the lower level, the pool’s outer wall is laminated glass, visually expanding the enclosure while allowing swimmers both to be seen and to see the waters of Long Island Sound in the distance. Hardscapes such as swimming
pools are softened by landscaping that can also provide privacy, shade, color and beauty. For a Meehan & Ramos pool and built-in spa in Westport, Eva Chiamulera, the senior landscape architect at Austin Ganim Landscape Design in Fairfield, designed a border wall and bed of perennials and annuals that blossom and bloom throughout the extended season. The natural backdrop Emerald Green arborvitae provides privacy and a sense of safe-distancing, as does the pool house far from the main house and other outdoor rooms. No matter where or how it flows, water also softens suburban property and draws family members and friends. “In these troubled times, water is a very calming and soothing
element in the landscape,” says James Doyle. Pools and spas, he adds, “are a great way to get teenagers to come home because that’s where they’re going to hang.” Water runs through much of the firm’s work. For a modern house in the Belle Haven section of Greenwich, a spine of black zone carries a narrow stream from the front courtyard, through the house, out a spout at rear and into a trough running alongside the pool. A high-end pool—when it can be installed, that is—can run anywhere from $100,000 to more than $500,000 depending on site-work, size, materials and features. These days, however, the benefits seem to outweigh the cost. What’s more, given the high demand, any expenditures are likely to be recouped when the house sells.
CONTRIBUTED
WATER, WATER EVERYWHERE
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HOME COURT ADVANTAGE
TOP PHOTO BY ALLEGRA ANDERSON; CONTRIBUTED
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ith team sports and youth recreation schedules scaled back for the spring season, Fairfield County residents are hiring landscape architects and contractors to create playing fields and a range of semi-professional-looking courts, rinks and cages. “Sport courts are really popular right now,” Kevin Ambrosio says. “Parents want to give their kids the opportunity to succeed in sports. They’re gathering friends and hiring coaches to come to their house, so they need a basketball court or a hockey rink or a batting cage.” (To give themselves the opportunity to succeed in golf meanwhile, parents are opting for chipping and putting greens.) Often, these spaces require a fair amount of perfectly flat ground, which in turn requires substantial clearing and grading. In Westport, Ambrosio’s crew installed a batting cage 12 feet high, 14 feet wide and 60 feet long, floored with AstroTurf and completely enclosed in strong netting. In Greenwich, they constructed a half-sized basketball court with the Michael Jordan logo and two layers of coated asphalt. Batting cages at this level can cost upwards of $20,000, high-end basketball courts from $20,000 to $60,000. Ambrosio’s company designs, builds, gets necessary permits and maintains projects for clients. Yet for plain, old-fashioned child’s play— aimlessly kicking a ball, flying a kite, hitting something with a stick, lying on a blanket looking at the clouds—leveled sections of a yard frequently suffice. “The big, open lawn is a request we’re seeing more and more of because people want flat play spaces for their children,” says James Doyle. For the Greenwich home with dramatically sloping backyard, his firm graded and seeded a large expanse of the property. Three sets of handsome stone steps, softened in between by banks of wild grasses, serve as a natural-looking transition from the upper terraces to tennis courts below. The cumulative effect of all these elements and features is to extend the seasons well beyond the time to come inside for the winter. With heated porches and paths, remotecontrol spas, and fireplaces and firepits, we may not need to go indoors again until the swimming pool freezes over—and maybe not even then.
above: James Doyle says he has received more requests for large, open lawn spaces to allow for more play space for clients' children. below: Ambrosio installed this completely enclosed batting cage in Westport.
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BOTTEGA VENETA
HOBBS
Trench coat; $3,850. bottegaveneta.com
Saskia trench coat; $400. Greenwich; hobbs.com
PRO TIP your closet portant pieces in im t os m e th of e agnitude of “A great coat is on great, or hide a m to od go m fro ok lo g). This and can take any kids or walk the do op dr to ’s pj ur yo t in mbined with sins (slipping ou the classics—co in ed ot ro e ar s d plaids. Calf season’s trenche e leather trims an lik ils ta de d an ner favorite. oversized shapes i colors are a desig ak kh l na tio di tra d yday basics lengths prevail an elevate your ever to t en em el g in ish ed too hard.” It’s the perfect fin looking like you tri t ou th wi l al — er th and pull it all toge ILDBYJANEL.COM –JANEL ALEXAN
FRAME
DER, PERSONAL
MICHAEL KORS COLLECTION
STYLIST, BU
Astor jacket; $528. Greenwich, frame-store.com
1. ALTUZARRA
Ambretta cotton-blend trench coat; $2,295. altuzarra.com
TOP SPOTS Shop outerwear at some of our local favorites: Aritzia, Greenwich Club Monaco, Greenwich Darien Sport Shop, Darien Mitchells, Westport Ralph Lauren, New Canaan Richards, Greenwich Theory, Greenwich & Westport
2. ACNE STUDIOS
Chino cape-back cotton-blend trench coat; $800. acnestudios.com
3. BURBERRY 1
2
3
Stripe detail cotton gabardine trench coat; $2,750. us.burberry.com
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IRO
Limest belted paperbag leather pants; $1,355. intermixonline.com
MOUSSY
SPLENDID
Maywood tapered jean; $350. West, Westport; west2westport.com
Camo Ryland paperbag pant; $178. Westport; splendid.com
AVEC LES FILLES
Dover utility pants; $148. anthropologie.com
DESTINATION: DENIM Every jean queen should be in-the-know
Sorry, skinny jeans. We’re swapping out snug styles for relaxed fits with utility details, paperbag-waists and lived-in washes.
PERFECT FIT A variety of lengths, rises and extended and petite sizes are available at: 7 For All Mankind, Westport FRAME, Greenwich Veronica Beard, Greenwich
PRO TIP
WELL-STOCKED e chy khakis are th “I would say slou are ey Th . 21 20 g r sprin biggest trend fo at e loungewear th a step up from th ther he W . 20 20 of most people wore for or o, high-waisted drawstring, carg to dress ay w t ec rf pe the oversized, they’re al world.” ng back to the re while transitioni T, RSONAL STYLIS –AMY GUZZI, PE STEFFECT.COM THESTYLInewcanaandarienmag.com
Discover your new favorite pair at: “B” Chic, Wilton Havana Jeans, Stamford Penfield Collective, Fairfield
TRADE UP Madewell and Rag & Bone offer discounts on new denim purchases when you bring in any older pair to donate (any brand).
ALL IMAGES COURTESY OF DESIGNERS/BRANDS; GUZZI BY JULIA D’AGASTINO
ALEX MILL
Expedition beltedwashed slim leg pants: $125. alexmill.com
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BOTTOM LINES
OSCAR DE LA RENTA
Floral high-waisted pants; $1,390. oscardelarenta.com
7 FOR ALL MANKIND
Trapunto belted wide-leg pant; $248. Westport; 7forallmankind.com
CAROLINA HERRERA
Silk Georgette wide-leg pants; $1,990. Mitchells, Westport; mitchellstores.com
VINCE
High-waist casual pant; $295. Greenwich, Westport; vince.com
When the occasion calls from something dressier, opt for trousers in super wide cuts. The silhouette elevates any look, whether you’re opting for subtle solids or hoping to stand out with statement-making prints.
STINE GOYA
Chet showpiece pants; $620. us.stinegoya.com
DIOR
Walk’N’Dior sneakers; $990. dior.com
SNEAK PEEK You can keep it casual but still look polished by sporting some smart sneakers. There’s truly a style for everyone, from options in neutral canvas and leather to bolder choices with pops of color and floral prints.
SUPERGA
The jute platform sneaker; $85. Shoes ‘N’ More, Darien, Greenwich, New Canaan, Westport; shoesnmore.com
HENRY’S
Women’s Lewis lace up; $285. Greenwich; henrysleather.com
TRETORN
Callie sneaker; $95. The Perfect Provenance Greenwich; theperfect provenance.com
CHLOÉ
Franckie smooth calfskin sneaker; $525. Richards, Greenwich; mitchellstores.com
J.CREW
Saturday sneakers with Liberty® print detail; $118. Greenwich, New Canaan, Westport; jcrew.com
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ILA
Rose cut oval pendant; $1,640. Henry C. Reid, Fairfield; hcreidjewelers.com
1
2
1. JL ROCKS
Droplet necklace; $450. Westport; jlrocks.com
2. MONICA RICH KOSANN
LOEWE
Sun, moon & stars charm necklace; $3,900. Betteridge, Greenwich; betteridge.com
Flared stripedpoplin shirt; $1,150. matches fashion.com
BALLY
3. GUCCI
Ouroboros 70 cm snake pendant; $1,450. Manfredi Jewels, Greenwich, New Canaan; manfredijewels.com
3
1. COS
Silk oversized shirt; $135. Greenwich; cosstores.com
2. JOIE
3. ZARA
Naro Shirt; $138. Greenwich; joie.com
Oversized shirt; $39.90. Greenwich; zara.com
4. CITIZENS OF HUMANITY
Kayla shirt; $288. Darien Sport Shop; dariensport.com
ALL IMAGES COURTESY OF DESIGNERS/BRANDS
The best way to accessorize your perfectly imperfect oversized button-down? Strings of delicate necklaces, of course. Mix metals, add varying lengths, and don’t be shy about showing a little sparkle.
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4
1. SHONA JOY
Chloe chevron balloon midi dress; $360. shonajoy.com
2. MAJE
Botanical print dress; $445. Nordstrom, The SoNo Collection; nordstrom.com
3.BROCK COLLECTION
4. ULLA JOHNSON
Salvina floral midi dress; $1,875. Barneys at Saks, Greenwich; saks.com
Selea puff sleeve midi dress; $395. ullajohnson.com
ALESSANDRA RICH
SLIDE & CHIC
Slip your feet into something fabulous ROAM
TIBI
The puffy sandal in sky blue; $137. Fred, Old Greenwich; thefredshop.com
Beryen sandal; $265. tibi.com
ANDREW MITCHELL BY THOMAS MCGOVERN
PRO TIP look the easiest way to “Day dresses are a s it’ r he et ring—wh super chic this sp ing nn ru r fo rs with sneake cotton sundress for ps m pu th wi shirtdress isp cr a or s nd ra er d done’ e perfect ‘one an the office—it’s th ial.” wardrobe essent
No 21
Chunky chainembellished slide sandals; $840. numeroventuno.com
R, CO-OWNER, CHELL-NAMDA –ANDREW MIT DS AR CH RI , MITCHELLS
AQUATALIA
Ivie sandal; $295. aquatalia.com
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TOD’S
GUERLAIN
Météorites Highlighting Powder Pearls; $64. Sephora, Greenwich; sephora.com
SLEEPER
Atlanta balloon sleeve linen dress; $320. modaoperandi.com
CHRISTIAN LOUBOUTIN
Zefira colorblock sandals; $895. christianlouboutin.com
PA S T E L P E R F E CT
RAY BAN
RB3138; $154. Sunglass Hut, Stamford Town Center; sunglasshut.com
JIL SANDER
Double-breasted leather coat with belt bag; $8,590. jilsander.com
“The chicest way to wear pa stel clothing is to add black and white accessories to the outfit—th ink powder blue b louse and trou sers + white booties + black hoop earrings. The contrast between soft co lor and the two extrem es of no color cr eate both balance and tension fo r the ultimate cool -girl look.”
ALL IMAGES COURTESY OF DESIGNERS/BRANDS
PRO TIP
MICHAEL STARS
Shorty cropped cardigan; $168. michaelstars.com
–MARIA TU newcanaandarienmag.com
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Sprinkle some soft-palette pieces into your wardrobe rotation. Shades of mint green, cotton candy pink, sky blue, sunny yellow and freshly-picked lavender will take you all the way from the start of spring through the end of summer. ZIMMERMANN
The lovestruck peplum bodice; $595. zimmermannwear.com
VERONICA BEARD
Ginta sateen-twill pant; $425. Greenwich; veronicabeard.com
STUART WEITZMAN
The Marguerita wedge; $295. Greenwich; stuartweitzman.com
TORY BURCH
Tory Sneaker, $228. Greenwich; toryburch.com
PROENZA SCHOULER
CARRY ON
CULT GAIA
Roksana large tote; $488. cultgaia.com
The latest arm candy to coordinate with your sorbet finds
GUCCI
BOTTEGA VENETA
Horsebit 1955 mini top handle bag; $1,980. gucci.com
The shell small bag; $2,450. bottegaveneta.com
MANSUR GAVRIEL
Mini pleated bucket bag; $695. mansurgavriel.com
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WHAT’S IN YOUR YARD?
DREW KLOTZ
KINETIC SCULPTURE
203 221 0563
DREWKLOTZ.COM
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advertisers index ART & ANTIQUES Drew Klotz Kinetic Sculpture... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... 78
see your wedding featured in
BUILDING & HOME IMPROVEMENT California Closets . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11 Hobbs Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23 Smallbone Kitchens . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2, 3 BUSINESS & FINANCE Broder & Orland LLC . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36 Castle Connolly . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 43 Cummings & Lockwood – Stamford ����������������������������������������������������������33 Davidson, Dawson & Clark, LLP..... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... 33 Pullman & Comley . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 39 UBS–Shantz Mantione Group (Stamford) ���������������������������������������������� 31 EDUCATION Brown University . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32 Columbia University . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32 EVENTS A-List Awards . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 34 Alzheimer’s Association of CT Celebrating Hope . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25 Best of the Gold Coast 2021.. ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... 21 Hope for Haiti . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35 FOOD, CATERING & LODGING Winvian . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14 HEALTH & BEAUTY Hospital for Special Surgery..... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... .. 7 LCB Senior Living, LLC . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19 Paul D. Harbottle, DDS, LLC .. ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... 23 JEWELRY Lux Bond & Green . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 LANDSCAPING, NURSERY & FLORISTS Homefront Farmers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9 Palmer’s Market . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4, 5 NONPROFIT AmeriCares . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35 Elephant Sanctuary . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 78 New Canaan Chamber of Commerce �������������������������������������������������������45
download the form:
ilovefc.com/submitwedding
REAL ESTATE William Pitt-Sotheby’s International — Darien . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Cover 3 Willliam Raveis-Shelton HQ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Cover 2
OR weddings@ncdmag.com
REAL ESTATE/DESTINATION John’s Island Real Estate Company ���������������������������������������������������������� 13 MISCELLANEOUS Hollow Tree Self Storage .. ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... 33 Westy Self Storage . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35
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postscript by julee k apl an
LABOR OF LOVE DARIEN DAYS CELEBRATES THE TOWN’S 200TH YEAR
D
iane Weeks has always been inspired by her home. The Darien based artist and author of Darien Days, a beautifully bound book celebrating the 200th year of the town, combined her talent of illustration and printmaking with watercolor painting to create this work. Each of the 84 pages showcases a glimpse at life in Darien—from a relaxing day at the beach to a look at Grove Street Plaza to a stop at the iconic Darien Sport Shop and the famed Memorial Day Parade. While she didn’t begin by thinking
that these works would turn into a book, she had created a line of stationary featuring local spots and eventually knew a book was in order. “It was something I felt strongly that I needed to complete,” Weeks says. “And it has been so rewarding when people share with me their own memories of Darien and what certain pages mean to them. It really can touch people of all generations.” To begin each work, Weeks first draws out the sketch with permanent ink, going over each line twice. In a way, she says, she is
creating a coloring book page in which she will paint after the drawing is complete. When painting begins, Weeks uses tiny paintbrushes and watercolors to paint each object in the drawing. Finally, she embellishes each painting with color pencils and in some cases, glitter. The result is a highly detailed work of art that took up to 100 hours to complete. Darien Days is sold in Darien at Barrett Bookstore and Darien Sport Shop. You can also find it in Rowayton at The Rowayton Arts Center and in New Canaan at Elm Street Books and The Whitney Shop. It retails for $68..
CONTRIBUTED
far left: Diane Weeks working on one of her carefully detailed works, that can take up to 100 hours to complete. above: One of Week's paintings of Grove Street Plaza in Darien. left: The Darien Days book is available for sale now at local stores to help› celebrate 200 years of the town.
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Experience Unprecedented Buyer Demand
The Moment to List is Now.
2020 is behind us, but buyers are still moving to the suburbs like never before. Customers are out in record numbers seeking homes at all price points in our market. The 67% increase in closed dollar volume and 51% increase in closed units* we saw last year in Darien is a testament to this trend and we believe this surge will continue for the months to come. If you’re thinking of listing your home for sale, we offer a number of advantages that are ours alone. Get in touch with us today to learn more about selling in today’s unique real estate market.
williampitt.com • 203.655.8234 DARIEN & ROWAYTON BROKERAGES Property Featured: 1 Woods End Road, Darien CT
Focus your phone camera on the code to view our office’s virtual brochures or visit virtualpreview.com/darien
*Source: SMART MLS, Data is based on single family, condo/coop, land, and multifamily home sales, 1/1/20-12/31/20 vs. 1/1/19-12/31/19. Each Office is Independently Owned and Operated.
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