How Chic! 120 Display until December 31, 2015 $4.95 U.S. Fall 2015 utahstyleanddesign.com
Inspiring Rooms and Dazzling Details
Red Ledges is a 2,000 acre, four-season community located in the beautiful Heber Valley, just minutes from downtown Park City. We offer the ideal balance of convenience, privacy and luxury along with a lifestyle to engage the whole family. Owners at Red Ledges enjoy:
Golf | Tennis | Equestrian | Dining | Swim & Fitness | Ski Lounge Luxury homes from $650,000 to over $2 million. Estate homesites from $195,000. Contact us to learn how you can live the Red Ledges lifestyle.
(877) 733-5334
RedLedges.com
Exclusively Brokered by Red Ledges Realty, LLC. Obtain the Property Report required by federal law and read it before signing anything. No federal agency has judged the merits or value, if any, of this property. All descriptions, depictions, and renderings are provided solely for illustrative purposes and are subject to change. Š2015 Red Ledges Land Development, Inc.
ROWE FURNITURE
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OSMONDDESIGNSFURNITURE.COM
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Utah’s Oldest and Largest Rug Gallery(Formerly Simantov Gallery) Cleaning | Restoration | Rug Pad
2876 S. Highland Dr. Salt Lake City, UT 84106 • 801.359.6000 • www.utahrugs.com
City Creek Center | 50 S Main St. Suite 271 Salt Lake City, UT 84101 | 801 532 1017 www.porsche-design.com
Your Style
by Teerlink Cabinet
Phone: 801 278-4400 Website: teerlinkcabinet.com
thecolonywpc.com
ONLY AT THE COLONY CAN
7,300 SKIABLE ACRES ACTUALLY BRING A
FAMILY TOGETHER
The new Park City Quicksilver Gondola connects two mountain areas and creates America’s largest winter resort, putting The Colony right in the middle of this spectacular 7,300 acres. The choices are endless. The Colony sets the standard for 80 ski-in, ski-out mountain living in North America. The combination 224
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The Colony Park City
248
Park City
of natural beauty, lot size, privacy, and access to mountain sports and leisure are unparalleled. Learn how you can live in this wonderland today. Schedule your private tour of this year-round retreat by contacting our sales team at 435.649.3411 or by visiting us at thecolonywpc.com.
Listed by:
AMERICA’S PREMIER SKI-IN/SKI-OUT PROPERTY ONLY AVAILABLE IN AMERICA’S LARGEST MOUNTAIN RESORT.
This is not an offer to sell or a solicitation of an offer to buy to residents of any state or jurisdiction in which the registration requirements for such an offering have not been fulfilled.
page.juliano@sothebysrealty.com summitsothebysrealty.com
PAGE JULIANO, REALTOR® 801.671.9761 @PAGE.REAL.ESTATE
FROM SALT LAKE CITY AVENUES TO PARK CITY’S HISTORIC MAIN STREET
©MMXV Sotheby’s International Realty Affiliates, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Sotheby’s International Realty ® is a licensed trademark to Sotheby’s International Realty Affiliates, Inc. An Equal Opportunity Company.
Each Office Is Independently Owned And Operated.
C. G.
S PAR K S
R N I T Ubig RE W ITH S O U Lmore, a sale,F Uparty, news and all in store for the fall.
WAREHOUSE SALE SEPTEMBER 18-19
OPEN HOUSE NOVEMBER 6
454 S
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SLC
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801.519.6900
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Federal Heights Masterpiece 1422 Military Way, Salt Lake City, Utah
Mosaic
Offered at $3,500,000 MLS #1316375
Tranquil 4 Bedrooms | 5 Bathrooms | Designer Kitchen | Reflecting/Lap Pool | Custom Cabinetry 6 Custom Fireplaces | Artist’s Studio/Loft | 3 Car Garage | Spectacular Gardens | 6,118 Square Feet | .70 Acre
Artfully Uniting Extraordinary Properties with Extraordinary Lives Debbie Nisson, REALTOR
®
Summit Sotheby’s Top Tier Agent Residential, Resort & Luxury Properties
801.739.5179 ©MMXV Sotheby’s International Realty Affiliates, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Sotheby’s International Realty ® is a licensed trademark to Sotheby’s International Realty Affiliates, Inc. An Equal Opportunity Company. Each Office Is Independently Owned And Operated.
debbie@debbienisson.com debbienisson.com
Modern and Contemporary Furniture Live your style. 5410 S. 900 E. SLC • Mon - Fri 10 - 7 Sat 10 - 6 • 801-266-5818 www.copenhagenwest.com
build build modern. modern.
801.652.2899 marsalaco.com marsalaco.com 801.652.2899
D O G S , D R I N K S , A N D L E I S U R E ( S U I T S ) . L U X U R Y I S H I G H LY A D A P TA B L E . C I T Y H O M E C O L L E C T I V E C L I E N T S , T H E M AT T S S O N S , AT T H E I R S E N S AT I O N A L S A LT L A K E C I T Y H O M E . S E E Y O U R S E L F L I V I N G H E R E ? Y O U M AY B E I N L U C K . C A L L U S F O R D E TA I L S .
| 801.718.5555 cityhomeCOLLECTIVE | boutique real estate brokerage and design firm | WE SELL HOUSES cityhomeCOLLECTIVE.com/findyourspace
18-Hole Rees Jones Golf Course • World-class Fly Fishing • 20 Miles of Hiking and Mountain Biking Trails • 5-Stand Shooting • 4x4 ATV Adventures • Ski-in/Ski-out Park City Lounge • Jordanelle Water Sports • Backcountry Yurts • Fitness Center and Pool Riverside Dining • 5-Star Service
Homesites from $400,000
Custom Homes from $1,400,000 800.771.6953
Victory Ranch is pledged to the letter and spirit of U.S. policy for the achievement of equal housing opportunity. We encourage and support an affirmative advertising and marketing program in which there are no barriers to obtain housing because of race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status, or national origin. Obtain the property report for Victory Ranch, required by federal or state law, and read it before signing anything. No federal or state agency has judged the merits or value, if any, of property in Victory Ranch. This is not intended to be an offer to sell, nor a solicitation of offers to buy, to residents of CT, HI, ID, NY, NJ, OR, PA, SC, or any other jurisdiction where prohibited by law. No offering can be made to residents of New York until an offering plan is filed with the Department of Law of the State of New York. Warning, the California Department of Real Estate has not inspected, examined, or qualified any offering of the property in Victory Ranch. Access to and use of golf and other amenities is restricted to Victory Ranch Club members and subject to applicable membership fees, membership dues, and other limitations. Each office is independently owned and operated.
© 2015 Porsche Cars North America, Inc. Porsche recommends seat belt usage and observance of all traffic laws at all times.
Panamera Hybrid Charge.
Porsche Salt Lake City 1045 South State Street 801·531·9900 porschesaltlakecity.com
Strong Auto Group Utah’s First Family of Performance Automobiles
ICONOGRAPHY
Handpainted mural on canvas. Oly Furniture showroom. High Point, North Carolina.
Plaster • Wood Finishes • Metallics • Murals • Decorative Finishes • Paint Call for your consultation 801-400-0000 www.iconographyfinishing.com
BUILDING CUSTOM HOMES TO
Complement Your2 Lifestyle
801.910.9913 | info@uplanddevelopment.com | uplanddevelopment.com Interior design & furnishings by Alice Lane
FA L L 2 0 1 5 V O L U M E 1 9 N U M B E R 4
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58 FALL FORWARD By Brad Mee
10 easy, high-impact decorating ideas that herald the autumn season
62 SMALL PLEASURES on the cover Bold architecture, chic style and natural finishes flourish in a new Holladay home.
By Brad Mee Photos by Adam Finkle
Big centerpieces may dominate the floral world this time of year, but smaller grouped arrangements bring a fresh perspective to seasonal decorating. Local florists share ideas for maximizing their impact.
84 OPEN HOUSE
By Brad Mee Photos by Russell Chandler Fort
Cover photography by Scot Zimmerman
92 SAVING GRACE By Brad Mee Photos by Scot Zimmerman
A fresh mix of vintage and modern elements transform a timeworn 1937 Georgian cottage into a gracious, high-style home in Salt Lake’s Federal Heights neighborhood.
100 BALANCING ACT By Natalie Taylor Photos by Scot Zimmerman
Enlisting talented Utah pros, Floridians Andy and Sherry Sturner build a spectacular Park City home boasting equal parts mountain and modern styles.
Armed with a vision and an A-list team of pros, Phil and Mauri Hansen create a Holladay home designed for entertaining in chic style and absolute comfort.
FALL 2 0 1 5
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CONTENTS
FA L L 2 0 1 5
38
50
44
STYLE FILE 35 Editor’s Pick 36 Runways and Rooms 38 Architecture 40 In Good Taste 42 Art Scene 44 The Goods 46 On the Town 48 On the Market
50
ON TREND
CURVE APPEAL By Brad Mee
Rounded forms and curvaceous shapes are big news in the design world as they ease comfort and organic lines into rooms throughout the home.
54
CITY SCENE
LOVE WHERE YOU WORK City Home Collective’s mid-century office reflects Cody Derrick’s philosophy for living (and working) in inspired spaces.
109 DINING IN AND OUT FISHING WHOLE By Mary Brown Malouf Photos by Adam Finkle
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109
DEPARTMENTS
By Jeremy Pugh Photos by Kerri Fukui
Find more design inspiration at utahstyleanddesign.com
36
Nose-to-tail fish dining is on the rise in Utah and has many chefs and their patrons hooked on this fullbodied way of serving finned fare.
112 DESIGN DIRECTORY A resourceful guide of materials, places and products.
124 SOURCES A listing of this issue’s people, places and products.
128 ACCENTS LOOKING SHARP Photo by Adam Finkle
As fashionable as they are functional, sharp pencils and their stylish containers look ultra smart when displayed out in the open.
601 South Broadway, Suite L Denver, CO 80209 phone: 303-698-9977 fax: 303-698-9797
303H AABC Aspen, CO 81611 phone: 303-698-9977 fax: 303-698-9797
2712 North 68th Street Scottsdale, AZ 85257 phone: 480-675-8828 fax: 480-675-7722
ON THE WEB
UTAHSTYLEANDDESIGN.COM Galleries, photos, behind-the-scenes pics and much more are waiting for you online.
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go ONLINE for the rest of the story UtahStyle
IN LIVING COLOR
UtahStyleDesign
AT HOME WITH SCOT ZIMMERMAN
Party-bright furnishings flourish onpage 36. Discover more online.
@UtahStyleDesign @utahstyledesign
An inside look at this architectural photographer’s Heber digs
CLASSIC CONTEMPORARY BY
F
O
R
S
FF U U RR N N II TT U U RR EE
E
Y
’
S
G G A A LL LL EE RR II EE SS
2977 2977 South South Highland Highland Drive Drive •• Salt Salt Lake Lake City City •• (801) (801) 487-0777 487-0777 •• www.forseys.com www.forseys.com
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“Modern comes from within….a drive to create order, balance and simplicity” Anne-Marie Barton
~
AMB D
E
S
I
G
N
INTERIOR DESIGN AND INSPIRATION AL VIDEOS 8 01. 27 2 . 8 6 8 0
AMBDESIGN@ME.COM
A N N E M A R I E BA R TO N . C O M
THE TEAM
ART DIRECTOR
PUBLISHER
Margaret Mary Shuff
Jeanine Miller
EDITOR IN CHIEF
SENIOR DESIGNER
ACCOUNT EXECUTIVES
Mary Brown Malouf
Adam Finkle
Kristie Buehner Janette Erickson Ozzie Feo Danielle Holmes Denise Janove Emily Lopez
ASSISTANT EDITOR
ART DEPARTMENT INTERNS
DIRECTOR OF OPERATIONS
Brad Mee
Jarom West
FOOD EDITOR
STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER
Val Rasmussen CONTRIBUTING EDITORS
Glen Warchol Jaime Winston
Marnie Weintz Jaimee Anderson PHOTOGRAPHY CONTRIBUTORS
Russell Chandler Ford Kerri Fukui Scot Zimmerman
COPY EDITOR
Dan Nailen
PUBLISHING PRESIDENT & PUBLISHER
Damon Shorter
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF
Marie Speed PRODUCTION MANAGER
Brittany Hansen
Jeremy Pugh Natalie Taylor
David Brooks
Ashley Miller MARKETING MANAGER
Cady Borchers Trina Baghoomian
515 S. 700 East, Ste. 3-i, Salt Lake City, UT 84102
28
/ 801-485-5100
U TA H S T Y L E A N D D E S I G N . C O M
Fax
/ 801-485-5133
/ magazine@utahstyleanddesign.com
Website
PUBLISHERS OF
Salt Lake magazine Utah Bride & Groom Utah Style & Design Boca Raton magazine Worth Avenue magazine Mizner’s Dream Delray Beach magazine
DIRECTOR OF ADVERTISING
Phone
CONTROLLER
Jeanne Greenberg
CIRCULATION DIRECTOR
WEB EDITOR WRITING CONTRIBUTORS
Margaret Mary Shuff
/ utahstyleanddesign.com
FALL 2 0 1 5
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EDITOR’S NOTE
GIVE ME THE DETAILS
D
ETAILS MAKE all the difference in the world,
according to Elizabeth Wixom and Kimberly Rasmussen, two of the many designers featured in this issue. I couldn’t agree more. I’m always prattling and penning about the design elements that make Utah homes dynamic, so you can imagine my excitement when I scouted the Holladay home that this duo and other pros created. It’s saturated with distinctive details that are not only stunning but downright savvy. Pretty and purposeful—a compelling combination that hooks me every time. When creating this issue, we couldn’t make a turn without running into another over-achieving detail. Consider Wixom and Rasmussen’s spectacular ceiling treatments. They float throughout the Holladay home’s interior, adding overhead dimension, decoratively linking spaces, framing recessed draperies and spatially defining rooms from intimate to grand. The interior’s finessed finishes–custom matte gold to hand-scraped limestone–and a linear reveal that recurs throughout the home perform with equal design-driving power.
J Squared Interiors www.jsquaredinteriors.com info@jsquaredinteriors.com 435. 901. 8554
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Designer Gregg Hodson packed his jewel box-like home with compelling details that have equal impact. A dance of cleverly conceived ceiling moldings, unexpected dark walls, pops of vibrant color and masterfully curated collections of art and accessories delight the eye while making the small interior feel cozy but not cramped. In Park City, the team at LMK Interior Design similarly exploited detail, composing an edited mix of materials that create a fresh modern mountain style. “Using the same mix of wood, rock and metal helps the eye to move seamlessly throughout the interior,” says LMK’s Mark Kizerian. The lesson here? Detail is much more than eye candy. It’s a tool that, beyond enhancing the look of a home, can elevate how it feels and functions. Why not put it to work in yours? Follow me on Instagram @brad_mee
BRAD MEE, EDITOR IN CHIEF
Come home to beautiful...
2015 Park City Showcase of Homes Interior Design: Linda Ashton & Emily Steck
174 East Winchester, Murray y 801.892.3444 y hamiltonparkinteriors.com
CONTRIBUTORS
TIFFINI PORTER is a freelance writer
and arts advocate covering contemporary culture in and around Salt Lake City. “I love experiencing a community in motion, watching how culture shifts and creative people come up with new ideas to share,” she says, noting that she discovered a little something for everyone as she explored the local visual arts scene for Art Beat (page 42), part of this issue’s Style File section.
GREGGHODSONDESIGN.COM {801} 532-4465
JEREMY PUGH jumped at the chance to
write Love Where You Work (page 54) and talk with one of Utah’s biggest style and design boosters, Cody Derrick. “Cody is, wow, intense,” Pugh says. “After interviewing him about the City Home Collective’s hyper cool office space, it was easy to see why he’s so successful. He definitely walks his talk.” Pugh himself, however, is a dedicated renter who writes for Salt Lake and Utah Style & Design, Ski and Sunset magazines and aspires to never clean a rain gutter again.
Twenty-Three years of Furnishing your Home and Garden.
There’s magic in the dirt.® 678 South 700 East
801.595.6622
The Ward & Child Garden Store Ad
SaltULake 4.75” 32 T A H SCity T Y L EMagazine ANDDESIGN . C O Mx 4.75”
Monday – Saturday 10:00 am – 6:00 pm
VAL RASMUSSEN, editor of Utah Bride & Groom magazine, calls on three of her favorite florists from the local wedding scene to produce Small Pleasures (page 62). Proving that the solo centerpiece isn’t the only option, Rasmussen showcases the versatile use of dainty-yet-dramatic displays. “What makes this style of floral arranging fun is that these vignettes can be used anywhere in the home: the dining table, a kitchen counter or even a bathroom vanity,” she says. “Plus, it makes for easy entertaining.”
GIH Find us on Instagram @gatehouseno1
GATEHOUSESTYLE.COM
I (801) 225.9505 I 672 S. State st, Orem
stylefile
PHOTO COURTESY OF CARACOLE
FALL 2015
AROUND BACK
Few sofas venture far from the wall, and their boring backs are one reason why. Not so for Caracole’s stunning Bee’s Knees sofa. Sexy curves, a shimmering finish and a hand-carved lattice back make this must-float piece a guaranteed center of attention in any room. Caracole sofa, $4,080, Hamilton Park Interiors, Murray
FALL 2 0 1 5
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stylefile
RUNWAYS AND ROOMS
Missoni Resort 2016
PARTY BRIGHTS The latest wave of vibrant autumn colors provides a lively palette for celebrating the festive season on runways and in rooms alike. FROM TOP: Wrapped-handle leather box, $328, Alice Lane Home Collection, SLC; Embroidered pillow, $229, Details, SLC; Roberto Coin cocktail ring, $8,220, O.C. Tanner Jewelers, SLC; Jasper Cube ottoman, $319, Copenhagen West, SLC; Lima throw, $169, Crate & Barrel, Murray; Talia, Pixus and Bahia fabrics, to the trade, Sahco, sahco.com; Channing desk, starting at $2,150, Jonathan Adler, jonathanadler.com; Votive holders, $6$20, Ward & Child—The Garden Store, SLC.
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©2015 Wood-Mode, Inc.
Entertain with stately charm.
Embassy Row by Wood-Mode, available in the U.S. and Canada. For more inspiration, visit wood-mode.com Craftsman Kitchens Salt Lake City • 801-293-8001
Ultra Kitchen Design Salt Lake City • 801-910-2444
stylefile
ARCHITECTURE
PHOTOS: PHIL ERIKSON, COURTESY OF CITY HOME COLLECTIVE; PORTRAIT: ADAM FINKLE
SAVING FOR THE FUTURE A Millcreek home makes history as Utah’s first mid-century modern building to be preserved in perpetuity. GO AHEAD and call it a savings plan. Last spring, this steel-andglass Millcreek-area home, designed by architect John Sugden, who studied under renowned Ludwig Mies van der Rohe, became the first Utah mid-century building to get a protective preservation easement to prevent future alteration and demolition of the property. Concerned that the house would be destroyed when she no longer owned it, current homeowner Mollie Kimball granted the easement to the Utah Heritage Foundation, a non-profit, membership-based organization dedicated to preservation statewide. Sugden designed the home for his mother Roberta in 1955. Over the years, previous owners made additions and alterations that detracted from his original design, so Kimball collaborated with Dee
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Wilson, a Utah architect who worked with Sugden, to return it to its original modernist state, one defined by a strikingly spare steel frame and glass walls. “In the modern movement, there is no detail and that is precisely the detail,” says Utah Heritage Foundation Executive Director Kirk Huffaker. He explains that most easements are for exterior only, but this one preserves the inside as well. “Because of the home’s transparency, the interior is as important as the exterior to protect.” At a mere 1,480 “Because of the square feet of living space, the rectanguhome’s transparency, lar home features a free-flowing interior the interior is as with a centralized kitchen, storage and important as the utility area, bedroom, bath, dining and living areas. The dwelling may be small exterior to protect.” by today’s standards, but its protective — Kirk Huffaker, Utah Heritage Foundation easement is big news for the future of it Executive Director and hopefully many more mid-century modern Utah homes yet to be preserved.
arc h itec t ure
l a nd p l a n n i n g
l a n d s ca p e a rch itec t ure
You’re in the r ight neighbor hood, let us help you create the r ight home. w w w. t h i n k a e c. co m
801.269.0055
Architecture for L I
ING
stylefile
IN GOOD TASTE
BUTTER UP Butter is bad? Pfft...Butter’s reputation as unhealthy is bunk, and cooks now rejoice in the incredible flavor boost butter gives to everything, especially browned.
Brown Butter The French call it beurre noisette because its finished color is the warm brown of hazelnuts (noisette), and it is one of the simplest flavor tricks in the kitchen. Put the desired amount of butter in a heavy saucepan over low heat until it's melted. Stir with a rubber spatula to ensure even melting. The butter will go through several stages: 1. All butter has a percentage of water; this needs to cook off. The butter tends to splatter at this point. 2. The butter will start to simmer—there will be lots of little bubbles. Continue to stir, making sure the butter is cooking evenly. 3. The butter will foam. At this point, watch carefully and keep stirring. 4. The butter will start to brown. You will see tiny flecks of brown as the milk solids cook. Watch it like a hawk. 5. The butter is brown—there will be lots of brown flecks (the milk solids) and the clear fat will be a deep yellow. Immediately pour it into a bowl. If you leave it in the pan, the butter will continue to cook and you'll end up with beurre noir, a whole different thing. You can chill the brown butter, then cream it with sugar to bake cakes and cookies or toss pasta with the warm butter, use it to sauce shellfish, chicken or any steamed vegetable.
“Everything is better with butter.” — Romina Rasmussen, Les Madeleines pastry chef
usd
UtahStyleandDesign.com for butter-buying guidelines.
In The Know
There’s more to butter than salted or unsalted, and butter eaters have more choices at the market than ever. Read the label to make sure you’re getting the right butter for the job or just the one you like best. Not sure? Buy several kinds and have a butter tasting to learn the different nuances of their flavors.
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Organic Valley cultured unsalted butter, pastureraised cows
Tillamook sweetcream unsalted butter from milk not treated with artificial growth hormones.
Plugra: Europeanstyle butter
Kerrygold Irish butter from grassfed cows
Purity Farms organic ghee clarified butter
When we opened our first showroom over 33 years ago we had one goal, to provide our customers with stylish, quality furnishings you wouldn’t find at the big-box chains. Come in and see our unique collection and experience the San Francisco Design difference for yourself.
Kelly Wallman—owner/designer
Salt Lake
(801) 467-2701 2970 Highland Dr.
Park City
(435) 645-7072 1890 Bonanza Dr.
Mon.-Sat. 10-6. Sunday and evenings by appointment.
www.sanfrandesign.com
Love your home
ART SCENE
PHOTO LEFT COURTESY OF BYU; PHOTOS ADAM FINKLE
stylefile
— BY TIFFINI PORTER
EXHIBITIONS
HANGING BY A THREAD
Inside the BYU Museum of Art, eyes are drawn upward to a large skylight and a vision of an undulating rainbow. What appears to be light refracted through a giant prism is actually artist Gabriel Dawe’s creation, Plexus No. 29, an installation composed of nearly 80 miles of colored thread. Meticulously placed using a 15-foot tall “needle,” the threads seem to move and change dramatically if viewed from the mezzanine above or the ground floor below. “It’s been delightful to see people’s jaws literally drop as they are moved by this wonder,” says Curator of Contemporary Art Jeff Lambson. BYUMOA, 500 Campus Dr., Provo, moa.byu.edu
DISCOVERY
SPECIAL DELIVERY A traveling gallery delivers the goods to Utah students.
“What excites me most is using art to help others connect with the world in new ways,” says Elly Baldwin, exuding contagious enthusiasm. Baldwin is a delivery driver with a specialized cargo: original, contemporary art. A trained artist and educator, Baldwin manages the ArtTruck, a mobile gallery that brings on-the-spot art education to K-12 students. A program of the Utah Museum of Contemporary Art, the award-winning ArtTruck makes art accessible and interactive, and Baldwin serves as a dedicated docent, making each visit fun and memorable. UMOCA, 20 S. West Temple, SLC, utahmoca.org
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GET IT HERE
Mini Masterpieces
Elly Baldwin, UMOCA Education Coordinator
Artists in Cellophane upcycle old cigarette machines to dispense pocket-sized, original artworks for $5 each. There are 100 active Art-o-mat® machines across the country, but only one in Utah, currently housed in the Rio Gallery at the Rio Grande Depot. Stop in, pull the lever, and become an instant art collector. Rio Grande Gallery, 330 S. Rio Grande St., SLC; artomat.org
I N T E R I OR
DESIGN
|
FUR NI TUR E
|
H O ME
L I V S H O W R O O M | 4 7 0 S M A I N | B O U N T I F U L | w w w. l i v s h o w ro o m . c o m
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DE COR
801.295.5442
8 0 1 . 2 9 5 . 5 4 4 2 | L I V S H O W R O O M | 4 7 0 S M A I N | B O U N T I F U L | w w w. l i v s h o w ro o m . c o m
stylefile
THE GOODS
TAKING A SHINE TO BLACK Basic black? Not a chance. When paired with warm shimmering metallics, black looks as current as it is chic.
Metal vases, $180 each, Details, SLC
Stewart pillow, $154, Barclay Butera Interiors, Park City
Armanta gold and blackened sterling silver necklaces, $2,100–$2,485 each, O.C. Tanner Jewelers, SLC
Brass Teardrop tables, $995 each, Jonathan Adler, jonathanadler.com
Donghia Origami console table, to the trade, donghia.com Michael Aram Bee box, $99, Ward & Child—The Garden Store, SLC
Visconti Michelangelo pen, $395, Tabula Rasa, SLC Major chair in leather and polished brass, $2,569, Alice Lane Home Collection, SLC
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Bedding, Drapery, Fabric & Furniture
Now a Hunter Douglas Blinds Specialist
Save 20% off all drapery orders Now Until 12/05/2015
736 West 300 South Salt Lake City, UT 84104 Enter off 400 South
Visit us online at www.krbeds.com 801-364-2128
stylefile
ON THE TOWN
CALENDAR
CITY LIGHTS Local light celebrations shine bright throughout the holiday. GALLIVAN CENTER joins Temple Square and Broadway Boulevard to light up downtown Salt Lake for the holiday season. Check out the Lights On Holiday Lighting Ceremony Nov. 27, 239 Main Street, SLC, 801-535-6110
Bob Martin
SIGHTS
’TIS THE SEASON When it comes to decking halls for the holidays, Bob Martin is months ahead of you. “My team and I start brainstorming in January, go to market in July and then immediately begin manufacturing decorations during the hot summer months,” says Martin, O.C. Tanner Jeweler’s visual director. Celebrating his 20th year designing the spectacular store’s holiday décor , Martin relishes the creative process. “I’ve been given an artistic license and have never
been told no—although I have raised a few eyebrows over the years.” In the past, crowds have clamored to see his life-sized nutcrackers and jolly snowmen, massive jewel-toned peacocks, shimmering winter scenes and more. This year’s Northern Lights theme promises to top them all. “We’re going big this year,” Martin says. The decorations go up the weekend before Thanksgiving for viewing throughout the holiday season. 20 E. South Temple, SLC, octannerjewelers.com
IN STORE
FLAMELESS FLICKERS Forget matches or ugly cylinders of glowing plastic. These battery-operated candles are made from real wax and their faux flames look so real that you have to touch them to discover otherwise. Candles, $37-$45 each; remote control, $8, Ward & Child-The Garden Store, SLC
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HOGLE ZOO presents Zoo Lights, on display beginning Dec. 3. The celebration includes animated light displays and live entertainment. 2600 E. Sunnyside Ave., SLC, 801-582-1631 FESTIVAL OF TREES begins Dec. 3 at South Towne Exposition Center. This annual festival auctions light-trimmed trees to benefit children at Primary Children’s Medical Center. 9575 S. State St., Sandy, 801-546-2060 THANKSGIVING POINT invites you to drive through more than a million holiday lights beginning Nov. 28, 3003 N. Thanksgiving Way, Lehi, 801-768-2300
stylefile
ON THE MARKET
VIEW MASTERS IVINS 4 BEDROOMS 4 BATHROOMS
5,271 SQ. FT. $3,185,000
FACTS : California-based Arthur Dyson designed this boldly contemporary residence for Utah clients. A dramatically curved ceiling appears to float above broad floor-to-ceiling, buttedglass walls that frame breathtaking views of red cliffs, black lava and a sage-covered landscape. KEY FEATURE : A commanding 18-foot ledgestone fireplace anchors the living room and master suite. LISTING : 1500 E. Split Rock Drive, Unit 109; contact Patrick Manning, Split Rock Realty, 435-652-9298
4 BEDROOMS 4 BATHROOMS
4,628 SQ. FT. $549,000
A grand living room boasts a 28-foot-high ceiling and more than 50 windows framing views of Panguitch Lake and Ipson Creek Canyon. Tongue-in-groove ceilings and open-beam construction shape the mountain cabin style. KEY FEATURE : The master bedroom’s private deck offers lake and canyon views. LISTING : 384 N. Scenic Circle; contact Tracy Armstrong, Stagecoach Realty, 435-616-3286
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SALT LAKE CITY PARK CITY 4 BEDROOMS 7 BATHROOMS
10,765 SQ. FT. $3,200,000
Walls of floor-to-ceiling glass frame panoramic city views. The airy house is set in a secluded landcape surrounded by waterfalls, streams and ponds. High ceilings, bold architecture and light-filled rooms delight at every turn. KEY FEATURES : A spacious master suite overlooks city views and a resort-style pool. LISTING : 3826 E. Thousand Oaks Circle; contact Linda Secrist, Berkshire Hathaway Homeservices Utah, 801-455-9999
7 BEDROOMS 4 BATHROOMS
13,248 SQ. FT. $8,995,000
This ski-in-ski-out accessible estate captures spectacular views of the Mid Mountain Trail in the exclusive Colony community. Modern architecture, floor-to-ceiling windows and light-filled, spacious rooms flow throughout. KEY FEATURE : A forested 19-acre lot set high above Utah’s premier ski town. LISTING : 160 White Pine Canyon Road; contact Lindsay Clark, Engel & Volkers Park City, 435-729-0699
— BY ALEXANDRA ADAMSON
PANGUITCH
IVINS PHOTO BY SCOT ZIMMERMAN; PANGUITCH PHOTO BY KARL HUGH, STUDIO WEST PHOTOGRAPHY
As the seamless integration of indoor and outdoor spaces continues to drive today’s dynamic design, home-hunters across Utah seek out homes with walls of glass and expansive views.
ON TREND C U RV E S
The simple addition of round ottomans and a shapely vintage chair softens the strong lines and window grid of this modern family room in Salt Lake City. Free-flowing dots on the rug also relax the linear tension. Design by Warren Lloyd and Susan Taggart
Curve Appeal Rounded forms and curvaceous shapes are big news in the design world as they ease comfort and organic forms into rooms throughout the home. BY BRAD MEE
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PHOTOS BY SCOT ZIMMERMAN
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BOTTOM RIGHT IMAGE COURTESY OF ETHAN ALLEN
traight lines and flat planes define most rooms: Windows, doorframes, walls and ceilings dominate interior spaces. And in many décors, linear furniture and angular fixtures rule. Compelling? Yes. Comfortable? Not always. Enter the curve. Today, rounded forms and curvaceous furnishings thrive as decorators and style-savvy homeowners use them to ease straight-lined edginess and to create a relaxed and organic feel in high-style rooms.
Clockwise from Top Left: Curves soften the front and illuminated base of this kitchen island designed by LMK Interior Design and created by Peppertree Kitchen and Bath; In Ivins, a floating curved vanity and round vessel sink contrast with and visually ease the adjacent wall’s checkerboard grid of tile; Ethan Allen’s arc-fronted Apollo sofa adds a graceful curve to this living room’s sitting area. The Ink Circles artwork highlights the sofa’s form and adds casual lines and comfort to the otherwise squared-off room; Architect Kathryn Anderson balanced the hard edges of a Salt Lake City bathroom with a spiral-shaped sink.
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ON TREND C U RV E S “Adding curved design elements to a contemporary home creates a more organic feel.”
Far left: Designer Belle Kurudzija integrated the organic shape and comfort of a curvy chaise to contrast with this room’s board-formed concrete fireplace wall. “Adding curved design elements to a contemporary home creates a more organic feel,” she says. “Because curves are strongly found in nature, they suggest physical ease and freedom, familiarity, relaxation and safety.” Left: Architect Arthur Dyson designed a dynamic St. George home in which a curved inset ceiling detail and a serpentinedetailed wall animate the billiard room. USD
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OUT OF LINE
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Round is in. Why not throw your rooms a curve?
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1. Kartell tangerine All Saints mirror, $370, Light Spot Modern Design, SLC 2. Caracas side table, $1,450, Jonathan Adler, jonathanadler.com 3. Aster Chandelier, $1,995, Jayson Home, jaysonhome.com 4. Piedmont Lounge chair by Barbara Barry for Baker, starting at $4,935, LMK Interior Design, SLC 5. Menlo Park leather sectional, starting at $10,000, San Francisco Design, SLC 6. Marble ring on stand, $260, Ward & Child—The Garden Store, SLC 7. Gracie pillow, $50, Crate & Barrel, Murray
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UtahStyleandDesign.com for more curved furnishings for the home
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PORTRAIT ADAM FINKLE
— Belle Kurudzija, Lisman Studio Interior Design
CITY SCENE W O R K P L A C E
Above: The building’s floor plan was kept intact. The open waiting area looks and functions more like a stylish living room. Right: City Home Collective’s owner Cody Derrick
Love Where You Work City Home Collective’s mid-century office reflects its owner’s philosophy for living (and working) in inspired spaces. BY JEREMY PUGH
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PHOTOS BY KERRI FUKUI
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mid the high-volume, fin de siècle mansions on South Temple, you may have missed it—a low, sleek, mid-century modern building on the eastern side of SLC’s mansion row. City Home Collective’s Cody Derrick zeroed right in on it. But then he has a history of seeing hidden history, of pulling pieces of the past into new light and celebrating a second, or even third, look at over-looked artifacts. That’s why in 2013, he gleefully opened City Home Collective’s office in the Moreton Building at 639 E. South Temple and lovingly turned the former insurance office into an embodiment of his real-estate and design firm’s ethos: “Love where you live.” Or in this case, “love where you work.” Or even, “love where you meet to talk terms on the home you will love to live in.” For Derrick these things are inextricably linked—design, homes, passion for living spaces—all parts of a
whole. But when he started in the real estate business in 2005, he couldn’t figure out why, somehow, they were separate. Why, when he looked at his colleagues and the dour real estate business in general, he felt like the little boy who wondered where the emperor’s clothes were? So he set out to design the clothes. “There are a lot of real estate professionals who shouldn’t be in the industry,” he says. “They don’t care about houses or people. In the public mind, they’re like used car sales people. When I started I was embarrassed to say, ‘I’m a Realtor’ because I knew I wasn’t just ‘being a Realtor.’ I knew that not only does this industry need to be revamped aesthetically and marry itself to design, it needed to be revamped ethically.” Yes, Derrick talks like that. A lot. But he walks his talk. One of his first jobs in real estate was in a rented cubicle space with 150 agents in a sea of ’90s-office maroon
Above: The large wood and marble conference table serves a variety of uses, from a space to pore over photography to a gathering space for dinners. Top Left: Architects Richard and Amos Jackson designed the Moreton Building in 1958. Lower Left: The glass offices were left intact and now serve as spaces for closed-door meetings when necessary.
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CITY SCENE W O R K P L A C E
WORK IT
4 ways to bring City Home Collective’s savvy styling home and glass. He believed then—and even more now—that people who are making one of the biggest financial decisions they’ll make in their lives should be counseled in a human space. So the young Realtor turned off the fluorescents above his cubicle, decorated it with color, brought in a stylish desk and lamps and even hung artwork. In the homes he was selling, he helped people stage and revamp the design. Soon, buyers wanted him to stay on and help them with interior design and, well, here we are at the Moreton Building, an architectural embodiment of those early ideas. “This space is our business model,” he says. “How we build space shapes life, love. This office has everything to do with our belief that people should be inspired by where they live.” And it’s much more than just a place to hang out a shingle (the Collective’s is tastefully hand painted on the marble facade outside, by the way). “Lobby” is too coarse a word to describe the entrance, which is more a greeting space than waiting area. The offices surrounding belong to everyone at the Collective, who float in and out animatedly discussing the narratives and photography that are the hallmark of the Collective’s website and sales approach. Also downstairs is a zowie lounge area, bearing Derrick’s emphatic design stamp, seen elsewhere around town at public spaces like the new Finca restaurant. (“After a decade, I was like, ‘I’m designing this goddamn lounge all by myself!”) He created a gathering space that can be configured for intimate or low-key rowdy. Here, new clients, former clients and clients-to-be are welcome for cocktail receptions, book discussions, wine tastings, fundraisers, lectures on design and the odd Chaplin or Tarantino film. We’d call it a salon, but that seems too dusty a word. “The tie that binds this space together is our Collective clients,” Derrick says. “They are all improving the community in some way and the whole point of building community is to gather together. We want to help them create beauty in Salt Lake.” USD
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1. MIX STYLES The stairway’s ornate ceiling medallion and mid-century Nelson bubble lamp reflects a talent for pairing vintage and modern elements.The lamp is never turned off, only dimmed after hours to catch the eyes of those passing by at night.
Right: In the lower level lounge, Collective members and clients gather. Derrick designed the space to suit many uses and furniture can be moved into a variety of configurations.
2. WARM IT UP Ceiling tiles and fluorescent bulbs were removed in the basement to raise the height and open up the space. Color repeated on the walls and ceiling minimizes the busy look of the exposed beams. Leather and wood meld with custom art by Courtney Derrick to add warmth.
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3. EXPAND SPACE This coffee table’s low profile helps the lower-level lounge area look and feel more spacious. The marble top uniquely diffuses dimmable lights that are installed inside the table. A patterned rug animates the cozy sitting area.
4. CREATE A COLLECTION Salvaged from the U of U Student Union building and discovered at the Green Ant, these lights are cleverly clustered and hang from the main room’s original wood ceiling.
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MONEY SAVING DESIGN
Fall Forward 10 easy, high-impact decorating ideas that herald the autumn season BY BRAD MEE
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utumn has finally arrived. It’s time to head indoors and harvest all the comfort and coziness the season has to offer. To get started, focus on the rooms you live in most—where you relax, entertain, dine and sleep. Spruce up these spaces with the autumn’s best—from tones and textures to furnishings and finishes. Here are 10 easy ways to celebrate the season by enriching your home with all fall has to offer.
1 SWITCH OUT GLASS Autumn’s palette includes hues ranging from teal to copper, amber to grape. It doesn’t include clear. Nor should your glassware. Capture fall’s richness by swapping out clear glass objects with colorful replacements. Everyday pieces including bowls, vases and glassware can help launch a rich, seasonal palette that soothes and surprises. Featured Clio vases from Crate & Barrel, Murray
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2 MIX PATTERNS Stark and simple may be fine for summer, but autumn calls for more complexity. Pile on the patterns. Mix all-the-rage paisleys, fierce florals, hybrid tribal patterns and masculine plaids. Select a common color to unite them, begin with a daring favorite and complement it with dissimilar, less dominant patterns. Save demure for next spring, now is the time to be bold. Featured textiles from Ethan Allen, SLC.
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3 WARM YOUR METALS Gold, copper, brass—warm metals elevate the style factor this fall, and you’ll find countless ways to make them at home. Here’s how: Look for polished nickel or chrome pieces and swap them out with golden metals. Lamps, metal-framed furniture, shimmering-woven fabrics, small accessories and everyday tableware all offer opportunities to heat up your décor with the season’s hautest metals. Featured décor by bernhardt.com
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Remember when you placed your interior on a summer diet to lighten and brighten its décor? Put it in reverse. This fall, add some weight with hides, textured textiles, grained woods and pottery. Think layers just as you do with your autumn wardrobe. Without creating clutter, stage and stack decorative elements and accessories. Lay a cowhide atop a woven rug, gather decanters on a modern tray and stack books on a table. That should get you started. Featured décor by jonathanadler.com
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5 TOSS PILLOWS (AND THROWS) Placing pillows is good. Piling them on is not. The same holds true for throws. To add luxe without adding litter, restraint is key.
Jeweled hide pillow, $189, The Garden Store, SLC
Mammoth pillow, $170 and wool blanket, $109, Alice Lane Home Collection, SLC
Knitted and mohair throws, $180 and $400, C.G. Sparks, SLC, cgsparks.com
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6 GO AU NATUREL
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7 HIT THE MARKET Load up on decorative accents during your next trip to the farmers’ market or grocery produce aisle. Fall’s bounty of shapely squash and gourds, fragrant apples and colorful pomegranates make striking delectable displays and are just a few crop-to-tabletop options that capture fall’s beauty with absolute ease and simplicity. Featured Riker table and Loden chairs from Ethan Allen, SLC.
8 MAKE SCENTS Heavier, richer fragrances are back, and we’re behind the movement. We’re not talking whiffs mimicking baked apples, candy canes or caramel corn; your rooms deserve more sophisticated scents. There are many candles, infusers, sprays and potpourris featuring fall’s fuller-bodied, refined natural fragrances. Our favorites include the Honey Rosewood candle, $55, from O.C. Tanner Jewelers and Cote Bastide Ambre French Pot Pourri and candle, $70 and $90, from Tabula Rosa, SLC.
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There’s probably some rule against putting a tumbleweed on your table. Ignore it. Autumn is a living season and offers so much for decking out your décor. Start with the season’s organic materials and natural forms: Twigs, seedpods and leaves put a textural twist on decorating as do animal-based accessories like shells, leather and antlers. Gather and mix them with stone, raw wood and iron. Too heavy? Add a some glass, shimmering gold or glittering geodes. Each is elemental in its appeal. Wayfarer Library table and table lamps from Ethan Allen, SLC.
9 TEXTURE TONE-ON- TONE Monochromatic palettes are back in favor but can seem one-dimensional. Mix in texture and your look goes from flat to all that. Plus, adding texture is an easy way to give a singlecolored dĂŠcor a dose of fall. Featured Bankun Raffia wallcovering from Thibaut, thibautdesign.com
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UtahStyleandDesign.com for more fall decorating tips Natalie Bernhisel-Robinson
PORTRAIT BY SUSAN BARNSON HAYWARD
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Imagine this: a hoop that mounts to your door and evokes the festive feel of the season. That’s a wreath, and Natalie Bernhisel-Robinson, owner of Le Fleur Design and author of Living Wreaths (Gibbs Smith $20), crafts them to herald the season for her home and those of her clients.
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Small Pleasures
Big centerpieces may dominate the floral world this time of year, but smaller grouped arrangements offer a fresh perspective to seasonal decorating. Local designers share ideas for maximizing their impact. BY BRAD MEE
PHOTOS BY ADAM FINKLE
Floral designer Amanda Hansen of Decoration Inc. staged burgundy dahlias in a trio of gold-dipped bud vases to bring an easy elegance to autumn arrangements. “Using repetition is an easy way to create cohesiveness among multiple arrangements,� says Hansen. Identical flowers, similar colors or like vases can make multiple arrangements unite as one. Small bowls and deep purple figs add dimension and expand the simple, single-hued display.
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PHOTO BY SCOT ZIMMERMAN
Floral designer Jessica St. Thomas capitalized on contrast by casually arranging hanging amaranthus, white calla lilies and a single chocolate sunflower in a trio of elegant cut crystal vases. “The flowers’ masculine hues and rich textures make the crystal look less formal and add a sense of surprise,” she says.
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“Multiple containers allow you to highlight flowers and foliage individually, but complement each other when grouped.” — Amanda Hansen, Decoration Inc.
Upper left: Decorative stone discs serve as a stage for Amanda Hansen’s simple arrangements. The designer’s combinations rely on contrasting colors and forms to create the visual impact: a winecolored dahlia pairs with an olive branch, and colorful coleus leaves join black calla lilies. Decorative stones from Ward & Child-The Garden Store. Left: Scabiosa pods and garden roses join for minimalist splendor in this contemporary grouping of arrangements. Because Amanda Hansen chose vases in a variety of sizes and shapes, she selected only two florals to maintain the desired simplicity.
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“It’s fun to style vignettes in your home,” says designer Pam Olson, who looked beyond blooms to finish this eye-catching display. Unexpected pheasant feathers, dried mushrooms, cacti and golden owl accents join more traditional flame calla lilies, football mums, dahlias and a cymbidium orchid to shape the arrangement. A gold tray and stack of books anchor the individual pieces and unite them into a cohesive collection. Vases from Native Flower Company.
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“Texture is as important as color and shape in floral arrangements. You have to have a variety of textures to create interest.” — Pam Olson, Native Flower Company
“Autumn needn’t always be brown,” Pam Olson says. Inspired by the tones of an antique hydrangea bloom, the designer selected soft green stoneware and a green bottle to anchor the individual arrangements of hanging millet, wheat and a single leafy branch. “The height and lightness of the branch balances the weight of the large-scale hydrangea bloom,” she explains.
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PHOTO BY SCOT ZIMMERMAN
Jessica St. Thomas added dimension to a display of two teardrop-shaped vases by staging one filled with maidenhair fern on a stone block. Below, two thick-stemmed peonies contrast with the ferns’ delicate sprigs. “Use a piece of stone, wood or stack of books to add height and dimension to similarly shaped containers,” she says. “By elevating one of the arrangements, you also elevate the entire presentation’s interest.”
“Grouping smaller arrangements creates a big look while keeping it simple.” — Jessica St. Thomas, St. Thomas Floral Design
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15 DISTINCT RESIDENCES
T H E PAR K I T E
HISTORIC MAIN STREET IN THE HEART OF PARK CITY TWO, THREE, & FOUR BEDROOMS $1,595,000 - $5,495,000
333 MAIN ST.
For More Information: Shane Herbert (435) 214-4988 shane.herbert@sothebysrealty.com theparkite.com
SPECIAL ADVERTISING SECTION
STYLEMAKERS Whether you’re searching for a new kitchen countertop, hunting for a must-have fabric or wanting to turn a single space—or your entire home—into something stunning, Utah’s most talented design professionals and purveyors are ready to help. In this special section, we introduce you to 16 Stylemakers, each offering the skills, expertise and quality products to help you reflect a style that’s both chic and undeniably individual. Here, they share professional insider tips and dish on the hottest trends in design.
Design by Barclay Butera Interior Design Photo by Scot Zimmerman
SPECIAL ADVERTISING SECTION
Milgard Windows & Doors 5570 W. 1730 South, Suite 1000, Salt Lake City | 801-972-0715 milgard.com/utah
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ilgard Essence Series® patio doors are the perfect companion to Essence Series windows— thoroughly complementing the rich, warm wood interiors of our windows. The new sliding patio doors are built with natural wood and a tough, long-lasting fiberglass exterior. “With Milgard Essence Series patio doors, we’ve re-imagined how the great outdoors meets the great indoors,” says Dan McAndrew, Architectural Representative. Because the patio doors are available in the same hardware finishes as Essence Series windows, it’s easy to coordinate design, allowing homeowners to match their styles with the same color palette for interior and exterior frames. “The exterior frame comes in 16 powder-coated colors, but it can be
Trending Now: Outdoor living. More and more people are expanding their home to the outdoors. Large patio doors that open when the weather is right are the perfect transition from the inside to the outside. Milgard has won the Ease of Use award from the Arthritis Foundation twice for its universal design.
repainted at any time” says McAndrew. “The solid wood adds a tremendous amount of warmth to any interior when its natural beauty shines through. Choose a wood species including vertical grain Douglas fir, natural pine and primed pine.” Essence Series patio doors are as strong as they are beautiful. Built to last, you will enjoy the smooth operation and superior
performance for years to come. “Fiberglass is notoriously durable and energy efficient,” says McAndrew. “These patio doors can be up to 16-feet wide and eight-feet tall significantly increasing the amount of natural light in any room, helping to reduce electricity costs.” And like Essence windows, this new patio door is backed by the Milgard Full Lifetime Warranty including Glass Breakage Coverage. “So you never have to worry about your purchase.”
SPECIAL ADVERTISING SECTION
deCondé’s Interior Design 3130 S. Highland Drive, Salt Lake City | 801-355-1727 decondes.com
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n 1974, Ken deCondé opened deCondé’s Interior Design in downtown Salt Lake City. Since then, it’s been a mainstay of high style in the valley. For more than 40 years, the design firm has been adding flair to residential, commercial and corporate spaces. “Interior design, like art, is very individual,” says Ken deCondé. “Each client lives in their space differently. Our designers listen carefully and create tasteful environments that reflect each individual’s personality.”
Trending Now: Classic styles recycled and refreshed with new colors and finishes. We’re seeing a lot of natural fabrics with sandblasted, distressed, glazed wood finishes on traditional furniture. Industrial chic blends classics such as bright velvets and crystal chandeliers with rustic woods, iron and metal. Although neutrals are soothing in our hectic lifestyles, don’t be afraid to add a burst of color.
deCondé’s Interior Design provides a full range of services. “From blue print to house warming, we can do it all,” deCondé says. Each designer has more than 30 years of experience and a keen eye to detail. “We consider the architecture of the home along with furniture, accessories, art, color, fabrics, textures, lighting and more to coordinate, create, and complete each design project,” deCondé says. “Whether we’re consulting for one item, one room, or an entire house or office, our designers have the knowledge and expertise you need.” In addition to interior design services, deCondé’s Interior Design offers a beautiful retail showroom that showcases timeless furnishings from the world’s leading manufacturers. If you are looking for something classic and traditional, refreshingly transitional or the latest trends, there is always something exciting to discover. Displays blend styles to create a unique and eclectic collector’s look—and spark some inspiration. Need to add a new accent piece, update a fabric on a favorite chair or refresh a space? “Rely on our designers to help you create a one-of-a-kind, individual look,” deCondé says.
SPECIAL ADVERTISING SECTION
Inside Out Architecturals, Inc. 3410 South 300 West, Salt Lake City | 801-487-3274 insideoutarchitecturals.com
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nside Out Architecturals is Utah’s decorative tile specialist with more than 50 exclusive sources of tile including ceramic, stone, porcelain, glass, metal and wood. Utah’s leading resource for historical tile, Inside Out Architecturals represents premier collections that help clients recreate authentic designs. Owner Leah Wynn and experts Kathy Shumate and Jenny Dabrowski continually gather exemplary artisan lines, many of which have provided historical tile for generations. Once you visit the Inside Out Architecturals showroom and view the possibilities, you’ll develop an instant passion for tile. With more than 45 years
Trending Now: Encaustic or cement tiles are being used inside and out to add a sense of design and punch of color. A little old and a little new goes a long way. Creating “rugs” out of patterned tiles on the floor or doing a whole floor of these tiles is so hot— we’re seeing them as accents, whole wall installations, backsplashes and cabinet faces.
of combined experience in assisting both professionals and homeowners with tile layout design, the energetic and knowledgeable staff provides each client with the product and design expertise that can make any project sing. These experts are always at the forefront of trends. Here, they share a few pro tips: “Many manufacturers encourage customizing your patterns by changing their colors,” says Leah Wynn.
“Make your accents your own by coloring them the way you want.” And keep in mind, the days of the one-color bath are over. “Definitely do your floor tile a different type or color than your wall tile,” says Jenny Dabrowksi. “Absolutely, use different patterns and materials together to add texture and interest and consider contrasting tile and grout. No more matchy, matchy.” And finally, “2015 is the year of the hex,” says Kathy Shumate. “Hexagon tiles don’t need to be small, white, and boring. We are now seeing these with patterns, bright colors and in large formats.”
SPECIAL ADVERTISING SECTION
Barclay Butera Interior Design 255 Heber Ave, Park City | 435-649-5540 | barclaybutera.com
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arclay Butera Interior Design delivers the capabilities of an international interior design firm with the personal touch of a boutique showroom. “We understand there are so many choices, options and opportunities in the design world and we’ve been very blessed to have loyal fans who love what we do,” says owner and principle designer Barclay Butera. “We get involved with our clients because we believe the key to a successful partnership is understanding both their lifestyles and their aesthetic tastes.”
The full-service interior design firm features more than 20 professional interior designers on staff and three showrooms in Newport Beach, West Hollywood and Park City, as well as online shopping. His iconic designs are the foundation for Barclay Butera Private Collections. “My style is elegant, sometimes glamorous, but always comfortable and livable,” says Butera. “That really sets us apart.” A world-renowned designer, Butera has appeared on various national television shows and received press in notable design publications. “I am really not a trend guy. I use the colors, furnishings, materials and textiles that suit the home and homeowner and I don’t really worry about what the color of the year is,” he says. “I have been leaning towards a very clean mountain-chic vibe these days: less embellishments, more modern lines, but all very quintessential Butera.” That is what keeps delighted customers coming back. “Our customers know they will find spectacular items for their homes in the showroom,” says Butera. “There is always something new and fresh.”
Pro Tip: Once you choose your designer, trust that person to do their job. When we interview a prospective client who appears to want to drive and own the process, we know it is not a good fit. Our staff is brilliant and accomplished; we provide fresh designs, amazing furnishings and decorating.
SPECIAL ADVERTISING SECTION
The Stone Collection 2179 S. Commerce Center Drive Suite 500, West Valley City | 303-307-8100 thestonecollection.com
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he Stone Collection has the largest selection of high-quality natural stone and premium hard-surface materials to choose from in the market. “Our vast inventory includes natural stone, exotic stone slabs semi-precious stone slabs, and other exclusive premium hard surface materials,” says co-founder Mike Hitchcock. The Stone Collection, founded in 2007 in Denver and open for operations in 2008, is opening a new showroom in Salt Lake City this fall. Salt Lake City general Manager Pete Smith is excited for the opportunity to serve the Utah market. “All of our material is displayed in state-of-the-art facilities, gallery style, to provide a oneof-a-kind experience. We have been servicing Salt Lake City for many years out of our Denver location and feel it is a great fit.” The quality of The Stone Collection’s material and showrooms is matched by their knowledgeable staff. “Fabricators, architects, designers, contractors and homeowners alike continue to come back to The Stone Collection due to our established track record of personalized, high-quality service,” says co-founder Alan Odom. “We leverage the latest technology available in order to enhance both the service and experience.” For the best possible experience, understand that natural stone will have variability, making each slab a unique piece of art. Be sure to bring any design elements with you when selecting your stone including cabinetry, tile, flooring, paint swatches and backsplash samples. The Stone Collection can provide design carts to help aid in the selection process. Make sure to visit the new showroom and tour the breathtaking array of options available.
Trending Now: Man-made materials such as sintered, ultra-compact surfaces and engineered quartz are popular alternatives to natural stone. White marble, light green and grey color palettes, exotic granites and quartzites, mitered waterfall edges, and semi-precious materials are all trending now.
SPECIAL ADVERTISING SECTION
LMK Interior Design 4626 Highland Drive, Salt Lake City | 801-272-9121 lmkinteriordesign.com
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egarded as one of the most well-respected and progressive design teams on the west coast, LMK Interior Design combines the passion for interior design and shared aesthetic sensibility of partners Rion Locke, Richard Miller, Mark Kizerian and senior designer Aly Jackson. This dynamic team offers diverse options and expert guidance to help you create the home of your dreams. With 25 years experience in high-end residential and commercial interiors, each partner brings strength, creativity and innovation to every project.
LMK Interior Design is committed to the principles of simplicity and modernism to enhance the home’s natural beauty. “We communicate extensively with our clients during each project to create spaces where they can relax and live surrounded by beauty and style,” says partner Mark Kizerian. Their signature style incorporates the right “mix” of architecture, furniture, fabrics and objects throughout the home. Much of their work is showcased in homes throughout Park City, Palm Desert, Los Angeles, San Francisco and Hawaii. With work commissioned by Stein Eriksen Lodge, Andrea Jung, CEO, Avon Inc., and Big Horn developer R.D. Hubbard, rest assured this design team can create, implement and fulfill your vision as well. “Clients value not only our creative design approach, but our commanding knowledge to manage and execute the construction process,” says partner Rion Locke. Through the use of Auto CAD and other state of the art technology, LMK Interior Design creates detailed documents (floor plan and elevations) that help with accurate bidding, budget and scheduling requirements.
Trending Now: Contemporary aesthetics. Whether your style is traditional, classic or mountain— the look is all about a cleaner line in a more casual environment. “The days of dressy design are over and replaced by sophisticated casual,” says partner Richard Miller. “We create this by mixing clean lines with natural/organic furniture, fabrics and accessories.”
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Duradek of Utah 2204 N. 640 West, West Bountiful | 801-390-9600 | duradek.com
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here are two sides to every story, but if you want a second-level deck that works as both a roof and a floor, you only need a one-sided solution: Duradek. With limited space and budgets, folks want more for less. Duradek’s proven system and creative designs transform your roof into usable living space. “With 40 years of walkable roofing service experience, we really do have you covered,” says principal Matt McClure. Due to the ever-growing demand for more outdoor living space, it makes sense to maximize your existing square feet by turning an upper-level deck into a roof for a lower-level. Duradek lets you design outdoor living features you never considered before because Duradek serves as both the walkable deck surface and the roof. Duradek is tested and evaluated for both roofing and pedestrian traffic standards, exceeding international building code requirements. Installed by trained and experienced professionals only, it comes with a 10-year waterproof warranty and five-year appearance warranty—the most comprehensive in the industry. “Our residential customers don’t come back for the same project, but
Pro Tip: Investigate products and options based on the needs of the design. Redundant systems can inflate the budget, while a simple, well-proven system may reduce costs. Every building has a roof—creative designs add value by using the roof to increase usable space.
we get a lot of referrals because Duradek works,” says McClure. “It lasts decades with no ongoing cost of maintenance, allowing a building’s design to open up areas previously not considered.” Duradek was the first vinyl deck product with roofing approvals and it’s been leading the market ever since. “To keep pace with market demands, we’ve added three new product lines with 10 varieties during the past two years,” says McClure. “We’re not a commodity; we’re a proven system that helps our clients improve their quality of life.”
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Madison McCord Interiors 3960 S. Highland Drive, Salt Lake City | 801-277-5555 madisonmccordinteriors.com
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ver watch Good Things Utah or The Younger You on Channel 4? If so, you may have seen Madison McCord Interiors’ unique set design and custom-built pieces. “Our custom upholstery and wood products have been featured on several TV shows from Utah to Los Angeles,” says founder Marsha Holfeltz. Madison McCord Interiors is a Four Hands designer showroom that showcases top-quality lines such as Rene Cazares, Palecek, Modloft, Mr Brown, Camerich and Caracole. “You don’t have to settle for something that doesn’t quite work in your space,” says Holfeltz. “For custom upholstery, you can get exactly what you want in less than a month. First, select your style from our many frames in our showroom, then your size and finally your fabric.”
Trending Now: We are obsessed right now with menswear-inspired tweed fabrics that bring mid- century modern designs to life. We are fervent believers in mixing thrift with couture.
The designers at Madison McCord Interiors believe your home should be a unique space defined by you. “Our large selection of one-of-a-kind dining tables, coffee tables, consoles and custom upholstery ensures that your home is your own inviting environment,” says Holfeltz. While Madison McCord Interiors caters to the design trade and offers exceptional trade discounts, it also offers an expansive stock of accent pillows. “Pillows are priced from $60 and up, and we source unique designs from New York and India to provide the unique look we are known for,” says Holfeltz. Browse through the 10,000-square-foot art gallery where they feature one local artist per quarter, and check back often for new pieces.
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Invictus Steelworks 3677 N. Highway 126, Suite M, Farr West | 801-605-8082 invictussteelworks.com
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teel furniture is all the rage right now due to its versatility and durability. Many high-end homes feature free-standing custom staircases and unique handrails. If steel is in your design dreams, look to Invictus Steelworks. Owners Robert and Beth Simmons founded Invictus Steelworks in 2015 to offer innovative and creative steel designs with a personalized touch. The duo specializes in functional steel art and artistic steel designs including furniture, wall hangings, sculpture, staircases, free-standing spiral staircases, customized handrails and more—all made with an intense focus on craftsmanship and high quality. Robert artfully designs all of the steelwork himself and, because everything is crafted by hand rather than machine, each one-of-a-kind piece stands on its own as art. “If you have something in your home that you are going to look at every day, it should be
Trending Now: Riveted pieces as well as polished steel and chrome are in high demand. Metallic colors, such as copper, gold and silver, remain a favorite while rose gold, popular in Europe last year, is making an appearance here in the states this season.
beautiful and you should enjoy it,” says Robert. “There’s no reason that it can’t be art and functional at the same time.” Invictus Steelworks offers both artistic and industrial steel designs as well as welding and construction. “We work closely with residential customers as well as with interior design firms and builders in both residential and commercial environments to create custom pieces to suit any space,” says Beth. See something you like on the website? The original items can be tailored as needed or the team can design a completely new piece to meet your specific needs.
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root’d 596 Main Street, Park City | 435-214-7791 rootdhome.com
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elissa Berry grew up in Ohio tagging along on design projects with her mother. Those early experiences evolved into a love for interior design. In 2011, she opened Root’d, a one-of-a-kind, full-service interior design firm located in the heart of Park City at 596 Main Street. “We are passionate about design and that translates into wonderful results for our clients,” Berry says. In addition to full-service interior design, Root’d offers a 4,000square-foot retail store filled with an impressive selection of furnishings, lighting, and accessories. “The showroom gives clients an excellent opportunity to touch, feel and experience pieces before making a purchase” says Berry. “We work with local artisans to provide our clients with one-of-a-kind pieces that complete their personal style. We also have a large fabric library with gorgeous
textiles.” Other offerings include custom rugs, bedding and throw pillows as well as kitchen and bath decor, and unique gift items including local fine jewelry. Designers at Root’d can help you create your own style with customized furniture and accessories. “While we seem to be known for our earthy modern style, we can create anything our clients desire,” says Berry. “We have thousands of fabrics, furniture and decor options, and we specialize in making the selection process seamless and fun. Let us help you find something to cherish,” says Berry. She also recommends making selections based on sustainability. “Our environment is important to everyone, so we work with a variety of eco-friendly manufacturers and local artists to minimize our footprint.”
Trending Now: Focus on design that is modern but timeless. We work closely with our clients to help them make confident decisions and invest in items that will last for years to come. Design can be an emotional investment and should grow with a family and their lifestyle.
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Bengt Erlandsson Interior Design 579 E. 100 South, Salt Lake City | 801-618-6947 | bengtdesigns.com
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embers of the design team at Bengt Erlandsson Interior Design bring more than 20 years of experience to interior design, architecture and project management. Its project portfolio includes international and domestic residential as well as commercial and hospitality projects. “We provide an all-inclusive interior design service,” says owner and principal designer Bengt Erlandsson. “This includes architecture and interior design services, space planning and house plans as well as construction documents.”
Trending Now: Mid-century modern is making a comeback. People are a little tired of over-decorated spaces and they want something simple. So we’re seeing a modern take on what we would have found in the 50s and 60s. Modern but familiar, not so much the colors, but the style of furniture.
This comprehensive design firm has carved its niche in upscale design projects. “Rather than focus on a specific style, we listen to what our clients want and need,” says Erlandsson. “When you apply the correct design principles such as scale, proportion and repetition, any style is going to look great from modern to traditional and everything in between.” A holistic approach ensures harmony in the finished project. “We look at the architecture, interior design and landscaping to make sure it all flows, inside and out,” says Erlandsson.
Details Comforts for the Home 1987 S.1100 East, Salt Lake City | 801-364-8963 | detailscomforts.com
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edding is one of the most personal elements in a room,” says Rebecca Hatch, owner of Details Comforts for the Home. “Everyone sleeps differently, so you need to find bedding that suits your sleep patterns.”
If you’re looking to make your bedroom a sanctuary, look no further than Details Comforts for the Home—the premier showroom for bed linens for more than 25 years. A Pine Cone Hill boutique, Details offers the largest selection of bedding lines in the mountain west including Peacock Alley, Sferra®, Yves Delorme, Matteo Home, Bella Notte, Anne de Solene, Ogalla Down, John Robshaw and more. Do you like satin or crisp sheets? Sleep warm or cold? On your side or your back? Details’ designers will work with you to discover your sleep style and match exquisite bed linens, high-quality sheets and duvets. Details also has a wide selection of one-of-a-kind furniture, upholstery, accessories, lighting, art, and pillows— everything you need to bring your whole home to life. It’s all in the details.
A clean, simplified look. There’s less fuss and formality, fewer throw pillows but more luxurious, natural materials. It’s all about comfort and functionality: the right lighting, art, lamps and sustainable fabrics.
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Harker Design 2816 S. Highland Drive, Salt Lake City | 385-227-8241 harkerdesign.com
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arker Design, a nationally known, full-service interior design business, has locations in Idaho, Wyoming and Utah. “Our clients are from all over the world, so we are accustomed to satisfying the tastes of a very diverse group of people,” says Scott Adams, designer. “Our projects run the gamut from traditional to contemporary, and we have worked on multiple projects with many of our clients using different styles.”
“We are often involved in the architectural design and interior design on resort, residential and commercial projects,” says owner and designer Pat Harker. “We have broad experience and are dedicated to quality. We bring all the elements of a project together to help achieve the desired results. It is exciting to see our clients be so thrilled.” Each project gets the attention of a team of designers and a project manager. “Results are always best when creative minds collaborate,” says Harker. “Whether it’s contemporary, formal or traditional, we can create any style. We start from scratch and that personal character is evident in each project. We strive to create something unique each time and don’t just do the same thing over and over. We continually add resources to stay on the cutting edge of design.” With broad experience taking projects from concept to completion, Harker Design believes in helping clients make good investments. “We can help a client with their first project on a modest budget as well as those with very large custom projects,” says Adams. “We can help clients make investments that stand the test of time,” adds Harker.
Pro Tip: Whether you are looking for a lamp or a sofa, opt for investment pieces that will stand the test of time. Classics endure, so put your money there. Spend less on trendy elements such as pillows or accent pieces if you need a quick refresh.
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The Design House Interior Design 432 East South Temple, Salt Lake City | 385-229-4000 | tdhid.com
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rom concept to completion, we focus on transforming our clients’ inner visions into reality,” says Susan Nicole Thompson, principal designer and owner. “We love reimagining spaces structurally. Many other interior designers don’t touch the architectural elements, but the bones of your space have to work first and then you can layer on the furnishings and accessories.”
Trending Now: Textures are huge, especially in a limited color palette or monochromatic design. Bold, graphic patterns and deep colors like indigo are making a big comeback. If you have a light neutral palette, it will be easy to transition in a pop of deeper color with interesting patterns.
The Design House Interior Design is a full-service interior design firm specializing in residential interior design and boutique commercial spaces. “We draft, manage the project, and deliver an amazing design from providing floor plans to installing the last finishing touch of accessories,” says Thompson. For her clients, Thompson attends national markets and builder shows several times a year to check out what’s new and to source both construction materials and furnishings. “We also utilize numerous local craftsmen to create our custom furniture designs,” she says. “A vast array of options allows us to create more unique spaces.”
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esign needs to make sense in your world. “Working with a designer helps you create a space that reflects your personality,” says Randi Smith, manager and designer at The Black Goose Design. Scale, color, depth, pattern, texture and art all work together to create visual interest and tell a story about the people who live in the space. “We see the big picture and can help you invest in the right pieces and create an enduring look that works for you,” she says. For the past 30 years, The Black Goose Design has been providing high-end furniture and fresh designs. “We’ve evolved to create a bridge between traditional and modern styles,” says Smith. “We work with the best vendors and resources so we can tailor a space to reflect your unique personality. People may think they can’t afford a designer, but ultimately, we can help you avoid costly mistakes or repairs.”
The Black Goose Design 7652 South Holden Street, Midvale | 801-562-1933 | theblackgoosedesign.com
Trending Now: Mixing textures, colors and metals creates character and makes the space feel eclectic. Use bold pops of color, like navy or pink, to freshen and update a neutral palette. Add reflective surfaces such as mirrors to allow natural light to move about the room, and layer hide rugs on top of natural rugs.
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Humble Dwellings 1265 E. Draper Parkway, Draper | 801-613-9570 humble-dwellingsfurniture.com
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umble Dwellings is a cutting-edge interior design firm that offers a unique selection of accessories, furniture and objects intended to inspire and provoke creativity in the home and enhance each client’s lifestyle. “We strive to inspire our clients to discover their own synergy and balance between the newest modern trends and the rustic and timeless elements of nature,” says Julie Meese, owner and principal designer. Meese, an award-winning interior designer with more than 25 years of experience, opened the store with her three daughters in 2014. “We inspire people to make their homes a place of peace and refuge from the outside world and to help them create a space that reflects their true personality and caters to their specific lifestyle,” says Meese. Humble Dwellings offers a full spectrum of design assistance ranging from pre-construction architectural design to complete in-home or in-store consultation. Before they begin a project, the designers at Humble Dwellings meet with clients to understand their unique set of needs. “We know that this process is a very personal experience,” says Meese. “We match each client with a designer who will complement their individual tastes and vision.” “Everybody has an inner style that brings them a sense of peace and safety,” says Meese. “We want to provide an outlet for each and every person to experience this balance within their own home.” This sense of balance and harmony can be created in any environment, regardless of economic status or income level.
Pro Tip: Don’t be afraid to mix old with the new. Vintage pieces bring a sense of timeless character, while reclaimed materials bring a more organic feel when you mix them with newer modern and contemporary pieces.
Open House Armed with a vision and an A-list team of pros, Phil and Mauri Hansen create a Holladay home designed for entertaining in chic style and absolute comfort. BY BRAD MEE
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PHOTOS BY RUSSELL CHANDLER FORD
Homeowner Mauri Hansen pauses in the living room and looks out upon the pool and patio. Elizabeth Wixom and Kimberly Rasmussen custom designed contemporary versions of traditional furnishings including shapely wing chairs and a large-scale patterned rug. Opposite: In the light-filled entry, a wall of saw-cut limestone backs a custom table crafted by Chamberlain Cabinetry.
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A table by Chamberlain Cabinetry and a cabinet by Craftsman Kitchens furnish the dining area. A sliding walnut door closes the space from the theater room. Opposite Top: In the living room, a fireplace wall of natural walnut travels upward from the hearth and spans the soaring ceiling. Opposite Bottom: Door knobs perform as large, goldtoned hardware on the kitchen’s gray-painted cabinetry.
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hen Phil and Mauri Hansen decided to build their new home in Salt Lake, they committed to a concept: Create a house centered around entertaining. Phil’s position as CEO of Salt Lake-based Clearlink requires the couple to host parties and meetings for clients and associates, and their new home would have to accommodate gatherings with style and ease. This goal, and Mauri’s innate aesthetic sense, drove the project’s design. “Phil knew how the home would work, and I knew how it would look,” she says. The Hansens enlisted an A-list team to create the entertaining-centric home. Phil first signed on friend Brandon LeRoy, a principal of Jackson LeRoy, a premier builder based in Salt Lake City. LeRoy in turn brought on architect John Shirley of
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Think Architecture and interior designers Elizabeth Wixom and Kimberly Rasmussen of Elizabeth Kimberly Design to the project. Landscape pro Jayson King of Landform Design Group rounded out the highly collaborative line-up. “The team was very creative and had amazing synergy,” LeRoy says. Much of this group’s success can be credited to members seeing eye-to-eye on key objectives: The home must fit the owners’ lives, reflect Mauri’s sophisticated yet natural style and suit the home’s established Holladay-area neighborhood. “We wanted to create a more contemporary home, but not cliche modern ‘box-on-box’ forms with sliding glass doors,” Shirley explains. Outwardly, a unique mix of pitched, hipped and flat roofs help
give the house a look that’s contemporary yet complements the neighbors’ traditional homes. While its outward appearance is dynamic, the home’s inwardly focused design makes it truly unique. Many houses look out onto views, but this one looks into its own environment, says Shirley, who designed the 8,000-square-foot home and a separate guesthouse around an enclosed plaza-like patio anchored by a large pool. “This is the primary focal point for every single space in the home,” Shirley says. The dwelling’s largest and most commanding space, the living room, not only flows into the open kitchen and dining areas, but also onto the broad patio luxuriously FALL 2 0 1 5
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Comfort and intimate scale are paramount in the master suite’s sitting area. A suspended ceiling mimics that of the bedroom. Right: A bedroom niche overlooks the pool and patio. Worsted wool draperies match the walls for minimal contrast that fosters the bedroom’s serene ambiance.
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Molding inlaid with dupioni silk adorns the master bedroom’s wall and dropped ceiling. The designers reframed many of Mauri’s art pieces and composed a collection for the luxurious space. Left: Suspended cabinetry with marble surrounds add contemporary flair to the master bathroom while wood cabinets contribute a more traditional edge. “Clouds” of drywall and marble give the ceiling dimension and interest.
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furnished with dining and lounge areas. It’s an ideal set-up for entertaining, whether for a small group or a cocktail party of dozens of guests as well as, often, a band. This seamless indoor-outdoor connection captivates from the moment guests enter the house. Once through the pivoting walnut and glass front door, visitors step into a conservatory-like entry with glass walls that visually expand the space. A back wall of saw-cut limestone finished with a scraped surface—one of the most striking materials featured indoors and out—grounds the room with raw, natural texture. “It adds a level of uniqueness to the home,” Shirley says. Stepping from this entry into the home’s grand living area presents the interior’s most memorable moment. “It’s the money shot,” says Wixom, describing the view through the living room into the open kitchen where the eye is drawn to a centered range hood and back wall visually framed and balanced with two doors leading outside. The aligned design adds comforting symmetry to the home’s more asymmetric architecture, Rasmussen explains. For ease of movement throughout the open space, the designers maintained generous pathways around large, floating furniture groupings and the kitchen’s two islands. For dramatic effect, Wixom and Rasmussen anchored the living room’s grand volume with a fireplace wall of natural walnut that travels upward and across
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the soaring ceiling. Here and elsewhere in the home, overhead treatments trump those underfoot. “This house is about the ceilings, not the floors,” Wixom says. The walnut references exterior cedar surfaces and complements the room’s naturally finished marble, white oak floors and gold-toned hardware. “Fine-tuning the finishes was like a dance,” Rasmussen recalls. “We worked with countless matte finishes to get the raw and natural look we wanted.” This same attention to detail continues in the home’s private quarters. In the luxurious master suite, for example, a unique panel treatment dresses the headboard wall and forms a suspended ceiling above. An identical element crowns the adjoining sitting area where views of the patio and King’s beautifully designed landscape infuse the intimate space with serenity and light. The secluded master bathroom—detailed with “clouds” of sheetrock and a marble slab hanging overhead—features a glass-enclosed shower and freestanding tub that overlook private garden vistas and are washed in tranquil, natural light. From the spectacular landscaping to large, open entertaining spaces and the intimate rooms designed as private retreats, this is truly a home that is meant to be shared, lived in and enjoyed. “We love to create and this was such a rewarding experience,” says Mauri, who worked hand-in-hand with the team from start to finish.“We couldn’t be happier.” USD
A marble island connects the kitchen to the large living room. Doublebleached, white oak floors are lightly stained to create a simple and sophisticated look.
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NATURALLY BEAUTIFUL 1. Exterior cedar, saw-cut limestone,expanses of glass and a masterfully composed landscape define the home’s natural, contemporary style. 2. A glass wall and shelves separate a bar and wine room located between the dining and theater rooms. Gold pendants by Arteriors. 3. Interior designers Kimberly Rasmussen and Elizabeth Wixom. 4. Seen and accessed from most anywhere in the home, the large pool and central patio serve as a spectacular focal point and spacious hub for entertaining and relaxation. 5. Large furniture, a Calacatta marble hearth and walnut fireplace treatment that travels across the ceiling accentuate the living room’s grand scale. 6. “This room is pure Mauri,” says Wixom of the fashion-forward library. The backlit, paneled dropped ceiling—painted high-gloss navy— hangs from stunning gold brackets. 6
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Saving Grace A fresh mix of vintage and modern elements transform a timeworn 1937 Georgian Cottage into a gracious, highstyle home in Salt Lake’s Federal Heights neighborhood.
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BY BRAD MEE
PHOTOS BY SCOT ZIMMERMAN
fter more than a year of scouring Salt Lake City for a fixer-upper, designer Gregg Hodson and his partner Gary McClellan finally found a diamond-in-the-rough dream home in the city’s Federal Heights neighborhood. “We were looking for a sad sack that needed to be totally redone,” Hodson explains. Within a day after discovering the neglected property, the couple had purchased and taken possession of the small 1937 shingled Georgian Cottage. “Even though it was a mess, I could see that it could be transformed into an amazing and gracious gem,“ says Hodson, who had renovated many homes for clients and relished the challenge. This house would provide many.
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In the living room, draperies tailored from Lee Jofa raw silk deliver a shock of color against walls and trim painted in contrasting finishes of darkened Galveston Grey by Benjamin Moore. “Painting the trim dark helps create a cozy, den-like feel,” Gregg Hodson says. Left: Located near the top of Salt Lake City’s historic South Temple, the small cottage was built in 1937. New exterior colors and a front door in glossy black hint at the interior’s captivating style.
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To begin, the small three-level, 2,600-square-foot cottage was dark and timeworn. Undersized windows provided only dim light for cramped rooms clad in tattered shag carpeting, “smokers-beige” paint, ‘60s paneling and failing fixtures. Structurally, the main-level floor sloped, the tiny foyer seemed to trip into the adjoining living room and the kitchen and baths had, as the designer recalls, seen much better days. Hodson and McClellan responded by gutting the interior down to the studs, replacing and expanding most of the windows and fashioning a fresh look for every room. “I considered how they would have done things in 1937 and then interpreted them for today in terms of livability and style,” says Hodson. Doggedly, he created a décor that’s decidedly dashing, yet nods to the home’s period past. Nowhere is this more evident than in the living room, where darkly dramatic gray walls and stately molding envelop the space and create an elegant backdrop for a keenly choreographed mix of furnishings, colors and collectibles. Accessories, lamps and a mid-century console discovered at antique stores and online meld easily with a sofa and chairs richly upholstered in mohair, leather and woven fabrics. “The fabrics’ colors are subtle, but their textures are bold,” Hodson explains. Gold raw silk draperies adorn new, dark-framed windows and join pillows in delivering vibrant color and pattern to the mix. Paintings, drawings and photographs gleaned over time gather in collections that perform as delightful focal points. The new marble fireplace surround and “beefed-up” built-in
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Homeowners Gregg Hodson, left, and Gary McLellan.
Lillian August host chairs upholstered in a bright orange outdoor fabric animate the relaxed dining room. A reintroduction of a 1960’s Floss Pendent light from Light Spot Modern Design hangs above a table from West Elm. Hodson updated Early American style side chairs with a coat of black paint. Opposite: Hodson deepened the new casement wood windows above the living room’s built-in bench and painted their frames dark to replicate metal. He renewed the built-in shelves, added sconces and created a new mantel and marble surround for the fireplace. An oil painting by Cary Henrie hangs above the firebox.
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“The only thing I kept in the dining room was the existing maple built-ins,” Hodson says. He updated them with fresh white paint and lowered the base of the wall’s new window. An upholstered bench provides casual seating to the light-filled dining area. The indoor/outdoor rug is from Artifacts.
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Designed by Hodson and Clint Call of Call’s Design, the kitchen features Caesarstone countertops from European Marble & Granite and porcelain wall tile from Daltile. The duo grooved the gray-stained walnut cabinets to create a subtle vintage detail. Below: A sleek hood and Miele induction range foster the kitchen’s clean, uncluttered style.
shelves bask in the glow of a jaw-dropping chandelier and help finish the glamorous, yet relaxed, room. “I wanted it to be like stepping into a great lounge that pampers you after a hellish day,” Hodson says. The rich mix eases in the dining room, where light walls along with enlarged windows and paned-glass doors, opening to a covered patio lounge, brighten the casual, cottage-style space. New, naturally toned oak floors flow here and throughout the home. “I wanted them to resemble the originals and not look glitzy like dark wood would have,” Hodson says of his understated choice. Original built-in maple cabinets, freshly painted white, frame a large window seat piled with colorful pillows. “These cabinets were pivotal in how the design of the house came about. I wanted to honor the home’s history, so I kept them and painted them to look current.” Nearby, vivid-orange wing chairs, boasting large-scale and modern silhouettes, anchor the ends of a farm table serving the adjacent kitchen—the project’s most daunting space. How does one create contemporary kitchen that fits in a 1937 house and looks like it could have almost been there from the beginning? For Hodson, capturing the space of an existing pantry and dingy hallway in the new kitchen and then using tile, lots of tile, were key to his solution. FALL 2 0 1 5
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HAUTE HOUSE 1. Teak bookshelves from CG Sparks, an antique rug and a table freshly painted white furnish the upstairs landing. 2. Contrasting paint gives the refurbished stair rail a fresh, elegant style. A collection of art adds color and form. 3. Hodson removed a stairwell wall and replaced it with railing that opens the space to an upstairs office. 4. A vibrant arrangement by Jessica St. Thomas of St. Thomas Floral Design punctuates the dining room with brilliant autumn tones. 5. The living room shelves illustrate Hodson’s flair for fine-tuning molding and beautifully composing even the smallest vignettes. 1
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Hodson matched the master bedroom’s drapery fabric with the walls painted Berlin by Kwal Howells. “This prevents the many draperies from standing out and visually cluttering the room,” he says. A lantern, found at a salvage yard and refurbished, glitters like jewelry. Below: Geometric marble mosaic tile gives an updated vintage look to the guest bathroom.
“The room is small, so I wanted it to look like it is a bright tile box,” he explains. He clad every wall with white 4-by-12-inch tiles, and even covered the backside of the open wall separating the kitchen from dining room in tiles. “It helps connect the spaces visually.” To foster a vintage feel, Hodson chose gray stain rather than chipprone paint for the custom, clean-lined cabinets and worked with Clint Call of Call’s Design to develop the vertically grooved, grained finish. Terrazzo-patterned Caesarstone countertops—a nod to mid-century, says Hodson—join appropriately proportioned appliances and simple lighting to keep the little space bright, clean-lined and uncluttered. The home’s classically detailed, yet modern, bathrooms, eclectically furnished bedrooms as well as the roomy landing and graceful staircase also reflect Hodson’s savvy ability to honor the home’s heritage without becoming a slave to predictable period design. Linked by savvy molding treatments, seven grayish wall colors and a mix of timeless and unexpected furnishings and fixtures, the entire home belies its small size with big style and undeniable charm. USD FALL 2 0 1 5
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Balancing Act Enlisting a team of talented Utah pros, Floridians Andy and Sherry Sturner build a spectacular Park City home boasting equal parts mountain and modern styles. BY NATALIE TAYLOR
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PHOTOS BY SCOT ZIMMERMAN
The stacked Idaho ledgestone fireplace, accented with a banded iron mantel and composite stone hearth, serves as the focal point of the sophisticated, yet casual, great room. Opposite: The breathtaking porte-cochere serves as not only a formal covered entry but also as a stunning architectural element. It introduces the home’s design palette—a mix of texture, tone and elements including stone, metal and glass. .
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ven as autumn leaves fall and snow begins to fly, there’s a hint of Miami heat warming the interior of this Park City home. As snowbirds splitting their time between Florida and Utah, homeowners Andy and Sherry Sturner desired exactly that as they worked with a talented team to create their modern mountain getaway in the resort town’s Colony community. The Sturners visited Park City for nearly 20 years before deciding to build a home in Park City. “We’ve skied all over the world, and this is our favorite ski town,” Andy says. So the couple assembled a team of professionals to help them design a home that strikes a perfect balance between modern aesthetics and the mountain setting. “We
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knew we wanted a contemporary feel, but wanted to make sure that it was still warm and cozy,” Sherry explains. “Thanks to our world-class team including architects at Otto Walker, designers from LMK Interior Design and the builder at Craig Construction, we were able to incorporate both the clean lines and the coziness we were looking for.” Hits of high glam were also melded into the mix. To incorporate chic and sleek into the rugged environment, LMK designers Rion Locke, Richard Miller and Mark Kizerian blended finishes and textures featuring a soothing color palette and then sprinkled in a little bling to add luster to the clean lined, contemporary interior. “Sherry loves rich, warm, earthy tones,” explains Miller. “So we
PORTRAIT BY ADAM FINKLE
Left: Homeowners Andy and Sherry Sturner enjoying the mountain setting of their Park City home. Below: The entry foyer features a chest in cerused rifted oak with bronze hardware adorned with a pair of glass and bronze Ralph Lauren table lamps. An iron mirror by Lillian August complements the mix.
Above: The slopeside, ski-in/ski-out, 9,900 square-foot home is anchored by a great room with high ceilings and expansive windows that frame spectacular views of the vistas down mountain. Dark beams accent the midtone tongue-and-groove ceiling.
The powder bathroom features glossy laminate cabinets finished in ebony. Waterfall faucet in chrome appears as jewelry in the space.
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added a few elements to the master bedroom, such as a gilded lamp, and then contrasted the metal with a roughly textured dresser to dress it down.” The designers’ creative choreography of similar contrasting pairings plays throughout. In the master bathroom, for example, the designers offset white lacquered cabinets—polished to a high sheen—with a wide plank walnut floor, dulled to a matte finish. And in the high-style kitchen, honed Calcutta marble and sophisticated cabinetry contrast with stacked Idaho ledgestone that recurs on the main fireplace, stunning staircase wall and
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even the exterior entry columns. “The polished Calcutta is classic, but a slight matte finish makes it more harmonious in the mountainous geography,” Locke explains. Repeating elements like the ledgestone creates a unified bridge from the great room to kitchen as well as from the inside to the outside. “We wanted a cohesive design,” Kizerian says. “Using the same mix of wood, rock and metal helps the eye to float seamlessly from the interior to exterior.” Maximizing views while staying within The Colony’s building requirements called for creativity and collaboration, and resulted in a
Above: A floating staircase with hickory wood treads and custommade iron railing overlooks the dining room. The stacked Idaho ledgestone wall echoes the fireplace and the exterior entrance, fostering a cohesive feel. Wide hickory plank wood floors and a bronze chandelier add mountain warmth to the modern home. Top right: The kitchen’s underlit floating shelves add visual interest and a fresh approach to functionality. Bottom right: The built-in kitchen banquette serves as a comfortable and casual alternative to the nearby formal dining area. Modern Greek Klismos chairs from Bolier surround the quartz-topped table.
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MODERN APPROACH 1. The master bath features white lacquer cabinetry with chrome pulls, a white contemporary vessel sink and under lighting. Wide-plank walnut wood floors in a satin finish balance the bling. 2. The stacked Idaho ledgestone fireplace is accented with a banded iron mantel. 3. Idaho ledgestone columns flank the stunning grid glass front door framed in hickory. 4. LMK Interior Design’s Rion Locke, Richard Miller and Mark Kizerian 5. The show-stopping kitchen features honed Calcutta marble countertops with waterfall edges contrasted with rifted oak cabinets. 6. The neo-classic contemporary walnut pool table invites play just steps from the lower level bar. 7. Display shelves crafted from dark rifted oak create a statement above the guest bath’s modern tub. 8. The mid-toned tongue-and-groove ceiling, accented with dark beams, warms the large volume of the spacious master bedroom. 4
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Adjacent to a climate-controlled wine room, the lower-level bar area features barnwood walls and a granite-topped bar with waterfall edge detail.
breathtaking porte-cochere that frames the home’s entry, capacious great room and vistas beyond. “One of the biggest challenges we faced occurred right before we broke ground,” says Andy. “The home was designed to fit perfectly within the allowed building envelope, but the placement of the front door and the view through the great room didn’t capture the most stunning feature of our property, namely the view of the valley and the Uinta mountain range, including Porcupine Peak and Lewis Peak.” So the team rolled up their sleeves and got creative. “In order to nail that view, we set the house on an angle,” ex-
plains architect Mark Walker. “That angle created a bend in the house and made the space much more interesting.” But bridging modern architecture and clean aesthetics was only the beginning; functionality was also key. “Our priority in designing our house was livability,” says Sherry, stating that every room needed to be both stunning and livable. “Finding that perfect balance wasn’t easy, but it was so gratifying to see our home come together in such an elegant, yet comfortable, way. From the minute you walk through the front door, you get the warmest feeling, and you know you’re home.” USD FALL 2 0 1 5
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on the table
Introducing
Utah’s first interactive dining magazine
CLICK THIS PAGE to view the current issue and sign up for your FREE subscription.
DINING I N & O U T
Fishing Whole
Nose-to-tail fish dishes are on the rise in Utah and have many chefs and their patrons hooked on this full-bodied way of serving finned fare. BY MARY BROWN MALOUF
PHOTOS BY ADAM FINKLE
Seeing an eye staring up from a dinner plate used to be an off-putting experience for Utah diners. Fish was served cut into steaks, filets and fingers or formed into patties or pureed into a spread. But times have changed, and fish served whole has become the mark of today’s sophisticated kitchen. Nose-to-tail fish— trout to silver-skinned branzino—is making a splash on menus across Utah.
Whole fried branzino prepared by chef Tyler Stokes of Provisions in SLC. (See recipe on page 111.)
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HOOKED ON BRANZINO
Aquarius Fish Co. co-owner and fish expert Nick Sheldon says the reason for branzino’s current popularity on the plate is a matter of moderation, “It’s a mild-flavored, mid-price and medium-sized fish.” Branzino is a European bass as opposed to the other chefs’ darling, Chilean sea bass, which is a Patagonian toothfish. Also known as Greek sea bass, loup de mer, spigola and robalo, branzino is easy to cook, according to Sheldon. “Just stuff the belly with herbs or lemon and let the fish speak for itself.”
EASY DOES IT
THE SIMPLEST WHOLE FISH RECIPE
Nick Sheldon, Aquarius Fish Co., SLC
GET IT HERE
WHERE TO BUY WHOLE FISH IN SLC For information and questions about the sustainability of the fish you’re buying, check out Seafood Watch, a service of Monterrey Bay Aquarium that tracks fishing and fish farming practices. Seafoodwatch.org
YOUR BEST BETS FOR BUYING FISH LOCALLY ARE: Aquarius Fish Co., 314 W. 300 South, SLC, 801-533-5653 Harmons, various locations. Harmonsgrocery.com Whole Foods Market, various locations. Wholefoodsmarket.com
1) Preheat oven to 325 degrees. 2) Drizzle 1 Tbsp. olive oil into a large baking pan; add several slices of red onion seasoned with salt and pepper. 3) Place 2 cleaned fish, each about 1 pound, in the baking pan and stuff each cavity with 1 lemon wedge, 1 rosemary sprig, and some of the red onion. Pour white wine and lemon juice over each fish and sprinkle with oregano. Drizzle 1 Tbsp. olive oil over the fish. 4) Bake in the preheated oven until fish is opaque and flakes easily with a fork, about 25 minutes. 5) Gently slide a spatula between the bones to separate fish; remove all the bones.
GOODS AND GADGETS
FISHING TACKLE
Flame Fish Stone, $80, Sur La Table, SLC
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Fish Spatula, $40, Williams-Sonoma, SLC
Classic 5” Boning Knife, $60, Williams-Sonoma, SLC
Fish Bone Tweezers, $30, Sur La Table, SLC
THE DELTA FACTOR
For those who might question the freshness of seafood served in a high-desert restaurant, fishmonger Nick Sheldon has a one-word response: “Delta.” Delta’s direct flights to its hub at Salt Lake International Airport have made all the difference to Utah chefs. Now fresh-caught fish goes from the plane to your plate with only hours between.
WHOLE FRIED BRANZINO from Tyler Stokes at Provisions Ingredients 1 whole cleaned fish, about 1– 1 1/2 lbs. The market you buy it from will clean it for you, ready to cook 2Tbsp. chili jam (recipe below) 2Tbsp. coconut cream (preparation below) 1/2 cup fresh herbs (basil, mint, dill, cilantro) 1/2 lime
Instructions Score whole fish lightly through the skin on each side so it will cook evenly. Season with salt and pepper and let rest 5-8 minutes. Heat sufficient oil to cover fish in a deep pot or fryer to 350 degrees. Gently slide fish into the oil until it’s submerged, then let it cook 8 minutes. Remove from oil. Let drain and cool slightly, then remove fins. Place on plate and garnish with fresh herbs, coconut cream and chili jam.
Chili Jam Ingredients
Tyler Stokes, Provisions, SLC
1/4 cup sunflower oil 12 Thai chilies 2 dried ancho chilies, softened by soaking in hot water 5 shallots, finely chopped 10 garlic cloves, peeled and chopped 3Tbsp. fresh ginger, chopped 1/2 cup diced tomato 1/2 cup red wine vinegar 1/2 cup rice wine vinegar 3/4 cup sugar 2Tbsp. bottled fish sauce
Instructions Sauté the chilies, shallots, garlic and ginger in the sunflower oil until shallots are translucent. Put in a blender jar with tomatoes, vinegars and sugar. Put back in the pan and cook slowly until thickened to a jam-like consistency. Remove from heat, add fish sauce and let cool. Refrigerate.
Current Fish and Oyster
LOCAL CATCH
WHOLE FISH MAKES A SPLASH IN SALT LAKE RESTAURANTS Sea Salt
Serves branzino al forno—oven-roasted with fennel, onions, garlic and tomato. 1709 E. 1300 South, SLC, 801-349-1480
J.Wong’s Thai & Asian Bistro
Whole snapper is traditionally fried whole with sweet Thai chili sauce. 163 W. 200 South, SLC, 801-350-0888
Provisions
Coconut Cream
Reduce canned coconut milk over medium-low heat until it is thick and creamy. Cool.
Lemon Press, $13, Williams-Sonoma, SLC
Fish, By Cree LeFavour, Chronicle Books, $27.50, chroniclebooks.com
Chef-owner Tyler Stokes puts a Thai twist on whole fried branzino. (see recipe) 3364 S. 2300 East, SLC, 801-410-4046
Harbor Seafood & Steak Co.
Harbor’s simple menu includes whole trout and other special fish, prepared with the diner’s choice of sauce. 2302 Parleys Way, SLC, 801-466-9827
Current Fish and Oyster Pot Latch Seasoning, $11, Williams-Sonoma, SLC
The hit of opening night at the city’s new seafood restaurant was whole branzino—Chef Logan Crews serves it with sautéed greens, marcona almonds, oil and lemon. 279 E. 300 South, SLC, 801-326-3474 FALL 2 0 1 5
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DESIGN DIRECTORY
Interior Design: LMK Interior Design, SLC Architect: Otto Walker Architects, Park City Builder: Craig Construction Company, Park City
See page100 Architects
Architectural Elements & Details
THINK ARCHITECTURE, INC.
ICONOGRAPHY
Think Architecture is a diversified architecture, landscape architecture, land planning and construction management services firm created with the aspiration to work in collaboration with project owners, public officials, and related engineering professionals to deliver creative, innovative, and visionary projects for an ever-expanding range of building applications.
Iconography applies the finest home and office decorative finishes and has interpreted the decorative vision of clients around the country at sites from California to New York.
5151 S. 900 East, Suite 200, SLC 801-269-0055 thinkaec.com
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fabulous customizable lines, its associates can assist in giving your project that unique touch you are looking for. Please call for an appointment. 3412 S. 300 West, Ste. A, SLC 801-487-3274 insideoutarchitecturals.com
1146 S. Richards Street, SLC 801-400-0000
Arts & Antiques
iconographyfinishes.com
MODERN WEST FINE ART
INSIDE OUT ARCHITECTURALS
One of Salt Lake’s best-kept secrets, IOA represents over 45 exclusive decorative tile lines. With 35 years of tile layout design experience and their
Modern West Fine Art is the brainchild and lifelong passion of Diane Stewart, a collector and well-known advocate for the arts in Utah. The gallery was created to support contemporary artists whose work offers unique,
DESIGN DIRECTORY imaginative interpretations of western land and people. Far more than eye-catching, their landscapes, portraits, collages, sculptures and traditional textiles offer a gateway into the spirit of the west. 177 E. 200 South, SLC 801-355-3383 modernwestfineart.com
Auto
into. Personal, professional service from knowledgeable, friendly people, they strive to earn your business every day. When it comes to the finest in workmanship, technology and exclusivity, you’ll enjoy doing business with Strong Porsche. Their certified sales professionals, the most highly trained service technicians in the industry, and an ongoing commitment to customer care all set them apart from the crowd. Welcome, and enjoy your visit—virtual or otherwise!
MARSALA & COMPANY
With over 40 years building high-end residential and commercial properties, Marsala & Co. has developed a reputation for obsessing over details. A leader among Utah builders specializing in modern and contemporary projects, Marsala is selective about the projects they undertake, choosing those that require precision. 2196 E Fair Winns Lane, Draper
STRONG AUDI OF SALT LAKE
1045 S. State St., SLC
801-652-2899
Strong Audi is the oldest and largest Audi dealer in the area. The Strong family has successfully owned and operated automobile dealerships in Utah since 1939. In addition, it is one of 20 Audi dealerships in North America to receive the Magna Society Award, an extremely prestigious award from Audi for excellence for sales, service, customer care and management.
801-531-9900
marsalaco.com
979 S. State St., SLC 801-433-AUDI strongaudi.com
strongporsche.com UPLAND DEVELOPMENT, INC.
Builders/Contractors/Construction JACKSON & LEROY
Jackson & LeRoy is committed to providing the highest quality remodeling and building services, with a passion for client satisfaction. They work seamlessly and efficiently with trade professionals and suppliers to oversee every detail, anticipate challenges, provide solutions and ensure complete satisfaction.
Upland Development, Inc. specializes in luxury estates, custom homes, outdoor living spaces, accessible homes, tenant finishes, and large remodels. Upland Development is committed to you and your future. Whether building your dream home, remodeling an existing home, or transforming your yard into an outdoor living space, they are committed to complementing your lifestyle.
PORSCHE OF SALT LAKE CITY
4980 S. Highland Dr., SLC
Holladay
Porsche. The greatest sports cars in the world. And Strong is like no other dealership you’ll ever drive
801-277-3927
801-910-9913 or 801-910-7454
jacksonandleroy.com
uplanddevelopment.com
DA N N A M I N G H A & A R LO N A M I N G H A
Dan Namingha, “Fall River”, 20 x 20”
Arlo Namingha, “Four Directions”, 20 X 20 X 5"
SEPTEMBER 2015 177 E. 200 S. Salt Lake City, UT 84111 | MODERNWESTFINEART.COM | INFO@MODERNWESTFINEART.COM | 801.355.3383
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DESIGN DIRECTORY
Cabinetry
(PCARA) is a 501c (6) non-profit organization comprised of over 50 Park City area restaurants created to promote the uniqueness of restaurants in this majestic area of Utah. The PCARA enjoys touting cuisine with originality served up in a resort-town atmosphere that will take guests away from the mundane. PCARA believes that if someone wants great food, a carefree atmosphere and quick escape from the ordinary, a visit to Park City for breakfast, lunch or dinner is the right choice. P.O. Box 3162, Park City
WOOD-MODE FINE
parkcityrestaurants.com
WARBURTON’S
Warburton’s Inc. has been serving the exterior construction needs of the Intermountain West for over 40 years, specializing in siding, rain gutters, roofing, patio covers, architectural sheet metal and many more products for both the residential and commercial industries. 139 S. State St., Lindon 801-785-9500 warburtonsinc.com
CUSTOM CABINETRY
Wood-Mode is more than a product. It’s a complete experience. Our 73-year history includes a reputation for fashion-forward designs, superior quality, fine craftsmanship and a dedication to protecting the environment. 408-296-1020 wood-mode.com
Dining PARK CITY RESTAURANT ASSOCIATION
The Park City Area Restaurant Association
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Flooring ADIB’S RUG GALLERY
New, semi-antique and antique hand-woven Persian and Oriental rugs from Afghanistan, the Caucasus, China, India, Iran, Pakistan, Tibet and Turkey. The largest selection of unique rugs, Kilims, tapestries, needlepoints, pillows, oversized rugs and antique Navajo rugs and blankets. Consulting, appraisal, padding, hand cleaning, museum-quality restoration, moth-proofing, pickup and delivery, spot/stain removal, hanging and stair
rod sets. Adib’s buys/trades old rugs, leases/ rents and consigns. The best quality and the lowest price guaranteed. Adib’s has relocated to the historic Villa Theatre, creating the premier rug gallery in the nation. Now featuring unique furniture and art. 3092 S. Highland Dr., SLC 801-484-6364 or 800-445-RUGS adibs.com DURADEK OF UTAH
Exclusive Utah distributors of Duradek waterproof deck, aluminum railing and more, Dekmax is the Utah and Idaho sole distributor for Duradek outdoor flooring, solid surface decking, outdoor tile, outdoor stone, Durarail railing and Duradek waterproof decking. 2204 N. 640 West, West Bountiful 801-390-9600 dekmax.com UTAH RUGS
Utah’s longest-running rug company, Utah Rugs is the sole and direct retail representative of the prestigious area rug designer and wholesaler Art Resources, which allows cus-
DESIGN DIRECTORY tomers to enjoy early access to new, innovative trends in designer rugs. 2876 S. Highland Dr., SLC 801-359-6000 utahrugs.com
Furniture C.G. SPARKS
Hand-picked antiques, new furniture crafted from reclaimed materials and accents for any space.
DECONDÉ’S
FORSEY’S FURNITURE GALLERIES
The finest in home furnishings from leading manufacturers from around the world is represented at deCondé’s. They invite you to browse room settings displayed with beautiful and stylish furniture, accessories, lighting, art and more. Plus, interior design service is available. Experienced staff at deCondé’s can assist with the selection of one item, a room setting, or furnish an entire home or office.
Forsey’s Furniture has provided the Salt Lake Valley with the finest in traditional and contemporary furnishings since 1951. A familyowned, second-generation business, their fine reputation has been built on their unending commitment to customer service and providing the finest quality furniture at reasonable prices. They employ a very talented sales/design staff, most of whom are ASID affiliated. They can handle any design task: residential, commercial or contract. They also provide complimentary design consultation. Extensive floor plans or renderings are available at a reasonable cost.
454 S. 500 West, SLC
Accents & Accessories
801-519-6900
3000 S. Highland Drive, SLC
cgsparks.com
Clearance Center 3006 S. Highland Drive, SLC
COPENHAGEN WEST
801-466-2996
Copenhagen West has specialized in modern and contemporary home furnishings and accessories for over 40 years. Whether it’s your living room, dining room, bedroom or office, they can help you put together a cohesive design that reflects your style and way of living. At Copenhagen West, they want you to live your style!
decondes.com
TRADITIONAL 2977 S. Highland Dr., SLC
DETAILS COMFORTS FOR THE HOME
801-487-0777
European inspired beautiful objects that make a house a home. Unique accessories, art, lighting, furniture, throw pillows and yummy bed linens that will complement most styles.
CONTEMPORARY 2955 S. Highland Dr., SLC 801-463-0777 forseys.com
5410 S. 900 East, SLC
1987 S. 1100 East, SLC
GATEHOUSE NO. 1
801-266-5818
801-364-8963
copenhagenwest.com
detailscomforts.com
Creating beautiful spaces since 1979, Gatehouse No.1 offers innovative design and
What are you craving?
Deer Valley Resort, Chimayo, Stein Eriksen Lodge
Find it here > ParkCityRestaurants.com Your complete guide to Park City area dining — an easy 35-minute drive away.
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DESIGN DIRECTORY high-quality furnishings for your home and business. Whether you are working from the ground up, or adding the finishing touches, their experienced team is ready to help you every step of the way. Love how you live.
sophistication, a blend of mountain, desert and city living. It provides an exceptional experience and a complete resource for great design. Denver, Colorado
krbeds.com
801-225-9505
johnbrooksinc.com
LIV SHOWROOM
GatehouseStyle.com HUMBLE DWELLINGS
3677 N. Highway 126, Suite M, Farr West 801-605-8082 invictussteelworks.com
Its store offers high quality home furnishings and accessories along with help from its design team. Its mission is to inspire individuals to make their homes places of peace and refuges from the outside world and to help them create spaces that reflect their true personalities and that cater to their specific lifestyles.
Talk to us and you’ll find they know our stuff, but also, you’ll find they’re a lot like you. They know that spaces need to be livable, and not overly precious. So call them. Go in and see them. Visit their blog. Find a way to engage them, and together, make your home really Liv. 470 S. Main Street, Bountiful 801-295-5442 livshowroom.com
1265 E. Draper Parkway, Draper ROOT’D HOME
801-613-9750 humble-dwellingsfurniture.com
JOHN BROOKS INC
John Brooks Incorporated is an extraordinary source for your interiors. It represents leading artisans of furniture, fabric and lighting in the design industry and recognize the distinctive palette of the western residence. The showrooms display a transitional style of relaxed
736 W. 300 South, SLC
801-364-2128
303-698-9977
Invictus Steelworks specializes in functional steel art, including furniture, wall hangings, sculpture, decorative handrail, free standing spiral staircases and more. Everything is handcrafted and custom.
601 S. Broadway
672 S. State Street, Orem
INVICTUS STEELWORKS
and fine bedroom furniture. Come visit our showroom today!
K & R INTERIORS
K&R is celebrating our 40th year of business. In the last 40 years we have became the largest and most efficient work room in Utah with a two week turn around time. K&R specializes in custom bedding, custom drapery
Root’d is a fine home decor and interior design boutique located in the beautiful heart of Park City. They offer an array of home accessories, furnishings and gifts with a variety of styles to please anyone’s taste. 596 Main St., Park City 435-214-7791 rootdhome.com
architecture interiors aerials resorts 1.800.279.2757 scotzimmermanphotography.com
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DESIGN DIRECTORY SAN FRANCISCO DESIGN
Home Accessories & Gifts
Classic American, European contemporary and rustic mountain home furniture and accessories. Endless combinations of handcrafted woods, top-grain leathers, luxurious fabrics, Italian marble, custom glass and sophisticated metal designs. Complimentary design service and financing available.
MODERN DISPLAY
SALT LAKE CITY 2970 S. Highland Dr., SLC
As it has been for many years, Modern Display is the place to go for unique home accents, furnishings and gift ideas. It is the premier source for year-round seasonal decor, specializing in both residential/ commercial and indoor/outdoor holiday installations. Visit their showroom for ideas.
801-467-2701, 800-497-2701
424 S. 700 East, SLC
PARK CITY
801-355-7427
890 Bonanza Drive, Park City
moderndisplay.com
435-645-7072, 800-497-7072 sanfrandesign.com WARD & CHILD—THE GARDEN STORE
Ward & Child—The Garden Store: An everchanging, seemingly endless selection of classic, non-fussy outdoor and indoor furnishings and décor with enough edge to keep it interesting. Pots, fountains, statuary and other artful objects are presented in the urban garden attached to the store.
Home Organization/ Interior Design ALICE LANE HOME COLLECTION
Alice Lane Home Collection is an interior design firm and showroom offering residential and commercial design services. Known for their fresh and sophisticated transitional aesthetic, they believe that your home should be your favorite place on earth. Your home is an heirloom. The furniture, rugs, accessories, lighting, and gifts at Alice Lane can showcase memories from your past and create visions for your future. SALT LAKE CITY
O.C. TANNER JEWELERS
602 E. 500 S., Unit A105, Trolley Square
For nearly 40 years, O.C. Tanner Jewelers has been not just a fine jewelry store, but the premier place for beautiful, unique and exclusive gifts and home accessories. From traditional to contemporary, elegant to relaxed, O.C. Tanner has a sense of style all its own. Visit and let their experts share it with you.
801-359-4906
15 S. State St., SLC
678 S. 700 East, SLC
801-532-3222
801-595-6622
octannerstore.com
OREM 1350 S. State Street 801-802-6266 alicelanehome.com AMB DESIGN
AMB Design will provide a full spectrum of services creating an overall vision from start to finish. AMB Design is appreciated for its “grass roots” style of collaborating with all
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DESIGN DIRECTORY ACCESSORIES
STRIKE IT RICH Put that lighter away. Instead, strike a match. Not only can matches do the job, but they and their containers can light up your décor with style.
Left to right: Medal Match Plate, $10, boxed matches, $3.20 each, Alice Lane Home Collection, SLC; Cube matches, $5, Jayson Home, jaysonhome.com; Shagreen Match Striker, $330, Aerin, aerin.com; Kangaroo Match Strike, $42, Jonathan Adler, jonathanadler.com
trades in order to create and oversee a comfortable, sophisticated, detail enhanced home. AMB Design initiates each project with attention to the architectural plans in order to procure aesthetic value while ascertaining flow, livability, space planning and overall architectural appeal. 4680 Kelly Cir., SLC 801-272-8680 annemariebarton.com
twenty years interior design, architecture and project management experience. The experience of its professional design team is extensive and includes both international and domestic residential, commercial and hospitality projects. Bengt Erlandsson Interior Design is committed to providing clients with a full array of interior design and consultation services. 579 E. 100 South, SLC 801-618-6947
BARCLAY BUTERA INTERIORS
Barclay Butera Interiors delivers the capabilities of an international interior design firm with the personal touch of a boutique showroom. The enterprise is comprised of full-service interior design capabilities, more than 20 professional interior designers on staff, three featured showrooms in Newport Beach, CA, West Hollywood, CA and Park City, UT. 255 Heber Ave., Park City 435-649-5540 barclaybutera.com
bengtdesigns.com
THE DESIGN HOUSE INTERIOR DESIGN
Interior design should stand the test of time. The Design House Interior Design caters to discerning clientele, creating environments with a natural flow and cohesive end result. The longevity of their designs is created by mixing multiple styles with delicate restraint. Call them today to start finding your personal style. 432 South Temple, SLC 385-229-4000 TDHID.com
THE BLACK GOOSE DESIGN
The Black Goose Design is known for its talented and experienced staff of designers and quality, beautiful home furnishings. It represents great value through its diversity of styles, friendly customer service and excellent selection of resources. Whether you’re looking for finishing touches or starting over, The Black Goose can help you.
GREGG HODSON INTERIOR DESIGN
Designing a tailored space that reflects your personal aesthetic and lifestyle is what you can expect from Gregg Hodson Interior Design. Creating extraordinary spaces for over 20 years, Gregg designs spaces that are conducive to each client by carefully considering ideas that range from classical elegance to minimalist opulence.
7652 South Holden Street, Midvale
1360 E. South Temple, SLC
BENGT ERLANDSSON INTERIOR DESIGN
801-562-1933
801-532-4465
Bengt Erlandsson Interior Design has over
theblackgoosedesign.com
gregghodsondesign.com
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DESIGN DIRECTORY HAMILTON PARK INTERIORS
J SQUARED INTERIORS
Your home is where you live. Enjoying moments and making memories. A gathering place for family and friends. A relaxing and joyful retreat. Our designers specialize in creating comfortable, beautiful homes. And whether you’re updating a room or building a new home, you’ll be inspired by our newly remodeled showroom.
1776 Park Avenue #4-215, Park City
174 E. Winchester St., Murray 801-892-3444 hamiltonparkinteriors.com HARKER DESIGN
Harker Design is a nationally renowned, full-service interior design firm with locations in Utah, Idaho and Wyoming. Harker Design offers complete project management, interior design, architecture design and remodeling design for residential and commercial projects. Contact them today to speak with one of their design experts. 2816 Highland Drive, SLC 385-227-8241 harkerdesign.com
the
jennysamuelsondesigns.com
inventory changes weekly so you’ll find that special, one of a kind item you’ve been searching for to make your space unique. 3232 S. Highland Dr., SLC
LMK INTERIOR DESIGN
801-484-2222
Rion Locke, Richard Miller and Mark Kizerian are committed to the principles of simplicity and modernism to enhance the home’s natural beauty. Through communication with their clients, they believe in creating spaces where one can relax and live life surrounded by beauty and style. With more than 25 years experience in high-end residential and commercial interiors, this design team can create, implement and fulfill your vision.
madisonmccord.com OSMOND DESIGN
2014 Best of State Interior Design Winner. We carry the most unique products in all of Utah at affordable prices. Utah’s proud sponsor of the Salt Lake City and Utah Valley Parade of Homes. What matters most? Your family. Your home. Osmond Designs has 2 locations to serve Utah:
SALT LAKE CITY
OREM
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1660 N. State Street, Orem
801-272-9121
801- 225-2555
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760-325-2959
151 E State Street
lmkinteriordesign.com
801-766-6448 osmonddesignfurniture.com
MADISON MCCORD INTERIORS
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DESIGN DIRECTORY manufacturers in Utah. They specialize in designing and building top quality custom-fit furniture for the kitchen, bathroom, study, media room, library, home office, work room, pantry, closet and other areas of your home.
install and hardscape. Some of its specialties include stone patios and walkways, stone firepits, rock walls, decks, railings, custom pots, water features and much more. 640 North Main Suite 1223, SLC
7940 S. 1300 West, SLC
801-292-5398
801-565-1654
seasonsfourlandscape.com TUCK LANDSCAPE
Natural stone slab resource, offering granite, marble, onyx, travertine, limestone, and other premium stone materials. Go see the many new and exclusive products in their 100,000 square foot, indoor and heated facility. The Stone Collection provides the highest quality natural stone slab materials along with an unmatched commitment to customer service. 2179 S. Commerce Center Drive Suite 500,
West Valley City 303-307-8100 thestonecollection.com
With 30 years of experience, Tuck Landscape has become Utah’s premier landscaping company. Tuck creates spaces that improve peoples’ lives. Whether the ultimate goal is a unique landscape element, increased property value or a breathtaking oasis, Tuck takes pride in creating and maintaining a client’s ideal landscape. The team of specialists gets to know the site and its clients’ needs completely, allowing them to develop the best solutions, maximize opportunities and ensure only the highest quality from start to finish. 801-266-1802 tucklandscape.com
Landscape Design BIG ROCK
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Big Rock Landscaping is a complete full service residential landscaping company serving Utah and surrounding areas for over 25 years. They specialize in landscape design, water features and rock work and have the experience to get the job right. They pride themselves on the quality of their products and with a full landscape design department,they can help you with every part of your landscape planning needs. From initial design concepts to finished working drawings, they will ensure that you get the perfect landscape for your wants and needs.
KRCL 90.9 FM
4980 Highland Dr., Ste. D, Holladay 866-288-9501 bigrockinc.com ESCHENFELDER LANDSCAPING
Eschenfelder Landscaping is Utah’s premier company for residential landscape design and installation. Call today for a free consultation. 184 E. Gordon Ln., SLC
90.9FM KRCL is a volunteer-driven, nonprofit 501(c)3 organization. As a listener supported, award-winning community radio station, KRCL’s mission is “connecting community through remarkable music and positive social change.”
KUER 90.1 FM/HD
KUER 90.1, a charter member of National Public Radio (NPR), broadcasts from the Eccles Broadcast Center at The University of Utah. KUER provides a commercial-free mix of programming to 170,000 weekly listeners across eighty percent of the state. KUER and its HD channels can be streamed online at kuer.org and with KUER’s mobile app for iPhone, iPad, and Android.
645 E. South Temple, SLC 801-718-5555 cityhomecollective.com THE COLONY AT WHITE PINE CANYON
When building your own home at The Colony, the landscape will be your inspiration. Ever wonder what it would be like to live in your own national park? Among 4,600 acres of pristine high alpine terrain, stands a private gated community, where approximately 90% of the land is preserved as open space. With the philosophy of less is more, home sites average more than five acres, each with skiin/ski-out access to Utah’s largest Resort. There really is nothing quite like The Colony. 2455 White Pine Canyon Rd, Park City 435-658-0048 thecolonywpc.com
801-768-8020 summitcreek7.com
101 S. Wasatch Dr., SLC
SUMMIT SOTHEBY’S- DEBBIE NISSON
801-581-6625
Debbie has over 25 years’ experience in strategic, innovative marketing. She is committed to providing extraordinary service to her clients whether they are selling or buying properties. With her expertise in identifying her clients’ objectives paired together with Sotheby’s International Realty’s dynamic, relevant marketing tools, she delivers exceptional results.
kuer.org
SCOT ZIMMERMAN PHOTOGRAPHY
U TA H S T Y L E A N D D E S I G N . C O M
City Home Collective is a boutique real estate and interior design firm. They buy, sell, design, stage and celebrate all things Salt Lake.
Inspired by nature and nurtured by revered builder Don Mecham, Summit Creek is a different type of real estate community. Tucked away inconspicuously on the North Slope bench of Loafer Mountain, this luxury living enclave has been envisioned, planned and developed to coexist harmoniously with nature while providing amenities that allow you to thoroughly enjoy it.
Photography
120
Real Estate
SUMMIT CREEK
office@eschenfelderlandscaping.com
Seasons Four Landscape has been in business for 26 years. It has landscape artisans who specialize in design, irrigation, landscape
scotzimmermanphotography.com
krcl.org
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MAINTENANCE, LLC
435-654-2757
801-363-1818
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peppertreekitchen.com THE STONE COLLECTION
torical. His photos are noted for capturing the spirit of spaces and the life of the moment.
Owner Scot Zimmerman is a widely published commercial photographer with 30 years of national experience. He specializes in location photography: architecture, interiors, resort, travel, landscape, industrial and his-
2455 E Parley’s Way Suite 240, SLC 800-382-7183 debbienisson.com
DESIGN DIRECTORY SUMMIT SOTHEBY’S- PAGE JULIANO
VICTORY RANCH
PORSCHE DESIGN
As a fifth generation Utahn, Page’s history and roots run deep in the Park City and Salt Lake City landscape. Following in the footsteps of her father, Park City developer Robert Morris, and mother, longtime realtor Carlyle Morris, Page has continued the family real estate legacy for 16 years with the same integrity and heart as her parents. Page prides herself on her knowledge of both the Park City/Deer Valley and Salt Lake City real estate markets
Set amidst 6,700 acres along a four-mile stretch of the Upper Provo River, Victory Ranch is a four-season destination for active individuals and families to escape from the everyday. Here, endless adventure awaits, luxury prevails and privacy comes standard. Minutes from Deer Valley. Ski-In/Ski-Out access in Park City.
Porsche Design is one of the leading luxury brands in the high-end men’s accessories segment. It stands for products that combine functional, timeless and puristic design with impressive technical innovations. Porsche Design products are sold worldwide exclusively in Porsche Design stores, shop-inshops, top-quality department stores and luxury retail outlets.
625 Main Street, Park City
7865 N. Victory Ranch Drive, Kamas 435-785-5000
City Creek Center, SLC
VictoryRanchUtah.com
801-532-1017
435-214-0014 carlyle-page.com RED LEDGES
A collection of carefully designed neighborhoods offer a selection of estate homesites, luxury cottages, mountain villas and mountain views. Some of the most compelling mountain real estate available in Utah, Red Ledges offers a select few the unique opportunity to make it their home.
porsche-design.com
Retail FOOTHILL FITNESS
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Foothill Fitness provides a variety of the best fitness equipment available at competitive prices with great customer service. Whether you are outfitting a corporate fitness center, personal training studio, condominium complex, or your home, we have the experience and expertise to handle the project from concept to completion.
MILGARD WINDOWS
Milgard Windows & Doors, a Masco company based in Tacoma, Washington, offers a full line of vinyl, wood, fiberglass and aluminum windows and patio doors for builders, dealers and homeowners, all backed by a Full Lifetime Warranty, including parts and labor. 1010 54th Avenue East,
Heber Valley
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801-484-9489
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45 HOLIDAY WHAT’S HELPERS HOTfrom NOW Caterers
to Color Tree Trimmers From to Cuisine
MISSIONS OF MERCY
Utahns Traveling the Globe to Help Those In Need FRUITS OF THE FOREST PAVOLOVA from SLC’s Grand America Hotel
SOURCES STYLE FILE
10 easy, high-impact decorating ideas that herald the autumn season BY BRAD MEE
2 MIX PATTERNS Stark and simple may be fine for summer, but autumn calls for more complexity. Pile on the patterns. Mix all-the-rage paisleys, fierce florals, hybrid tribal patterns and masculine plaids. Select a common color to unite them, begin with a daring favorite and complement it with dissimilar, less dominant patterns. Save demure for next spring, now is the time to be bold. Featured textiles from Ethan Allen, SLC.
3 WARM YOUR METALS Gold, copper, brass—warm metals elevate the style factor this fall, and you’ll find countless ways to make them at home. Here’s how: Look for polished nickel or chrome pieces and swap them out with golden metals. Lamps, metal-framed furniture, shimmering-woven fabrics, small accessories and everyday tableware all offer opportunities to heat up your décor with the season’s hautest metals. Featured décor by bernhardt.com
4 PUT SOME WEIGHT ON
A
Remember when you placed your interior on a summer diet to lighten and brighten its décor? Put it in reverse. This fall, add some
utumn has finally arrived. It’s time to head indoors and harvest all the comfort and coziness the season has to offer. To
weight with hides, textured textiles, grained
get started, focus on the rooms you live
woods and pottery. Think layers just as you do with your autumn wardrobe. Without creating
in most—where you relax, entertain, dine and sleep. Spruce up these spaces with the
and accessories. Lay a cowhide atop a woven
clutter, stage and stack decorative elements
autumn’s best—from tones and textures to
rug, gather decanters on a modern tray and stack books on a table. That should get you
furnishings and finishes. Here are 10 easy ways to celebrate the season by enriching your home with all fall has to offer.
started. Featured décor by jonathanadler.com
1 SWITCH OUT GLASS Autumn’s palette includes hues ranging from teal to copper, amber to grape. It doesn’t include clear. Nor should your glassware. Cap-
5 TOSS PILLOWS (AND THROWS)
ture fall’s richness by swapping out clear glass
Placing pillows is good. Piling them
objects with colorful replacements. Everyday pieces including bowls, vases and glassware can help launch a rich, seasonal palette that
on is not. The same holds true for throws. To add luxe without adding
soothes and surprises. Featured Clio vases
litter, restraint is key.
from Crate & Barrel, Murray
58
Jeweled hide pillow, $189, The Garden Store, SLC
Mammoth pillow, $170 and wool blanket, $109, Alice Lane Home Collection, SLC
Knitted and mohair throws, $180 and $400, C.G. Sparks, SLC, cgsparks.com
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FALL FORWARD Pages 58-61 Bernhardt, bernhardt.com; Crate & Barrel, Murray, crateandbarrel.com; Ethan Allen, SLC, ethanallen.com; Jonathan Adler, jonathanadler.com; O.C. Tanner Jewelers, SLC, octannerjewelers.com; Tabula Rasa, SLC, tabularasastationers.com; Thibaut, thibautdesign.com, La Fleur Design, SLC, lafleurdesign.com Small Pleasures
Big centerpieces may dominate the floral world this time of year, but smaller grouped arrangements offer a fresh perspective to seasonal decorating. Local designers share ideas for maximizing their impact. BY BRAD MEE
PHOTOS BY ADAM FINKLE
Floral designer Amanda Hansen of Decoration Inc. staged burgundy dahlias in a trio of gold-dipped bud vases to bring an easy elegance to autumn arrangements. “Using repetition is an easy way to create cohesiveness among multiple arrangements,” says Hansen. Identical flowers, similar colors or like vases can make multiple arrangements unite as one. Small bowls and deep purple figs add dimension and expand the simple, single-hued display.
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PHOTO BY SCOT ZIMMERMAN
Page 35 Editor’s Pick Hamilton Park Interiors, Murray, hamiltonparkut.com Page 36 Runway and Rooms Alice Lane Home Collection, SLC, alicelanehome.com; Copehagen West, SLC, copenhagenwest.com; Crate & Barrel, Murray, crateandbarrel.com; Details Comforts for the Home, SLC, detailscomforts.com; O.C. Tanner Jewelers, SLC, octanner.com; Sahco, sahco. com, available through John Brooks Inc. johnbrooksinc.com; Ward & Child—The Garden Store, SLC, 801-595-6622 Page 38 Architecture Utah Heritage Foundation, SLC, utahheritagefoundation.com Page 40 In Good Taste Les Madelaine, SLC, lesmadeleines.com Page 42 Art Scene BYU Museum of Art, Provo, moa.byu.edu; CUAC, SLC cuartcenter.org; Rio Grande Gallery, SLC, heritage.utah.gov; UMFA, SLC, umfa.utah. edu/foca; UMOCA, SLC, utahmoca.org Page 44 The Goods Alice Lane Home Collection, SLC, alicelanehome.com; Barclay Butera Interiors, Park City, barclaybutera.com; Details Comforts for the Home, SLC, detailscomforts.com; Donghia, donghia.com available through John Brooks Inc., johnbrooksinc.com; Jonathan Adler, jonathanadler.com; O.C. Tanner Jewelers, SLC, octannerjewelers.com; Tabula Rasa, SLC, tabularasastationers.com; Ward & Child—The Garden Store, SLC, 801-595-6622 Page 46 On the Town O.C. Tanner Jewelers, SLC, octanner.com; Ward & Child—The Garden Store, SLC, 801-595-6622
Fall Forward
U TA H S T Y L E A N D D E S I G N . C O M
Floral designer Jessica St. Thomas capitalized on contrast by casually arranging hanging amaranthus, white calla lilies and a single chocolate sunflower in a trio of elegant cut crystal vases. “The flowers’ masculine hues and rich textures make the crystal look less formal and add a sense of surprise,” she says.
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SMALL PLEASURES Pages 62-67 Decoration Inc., SLC, decorationinc.com; Native Flower Company, SLC, nativeflowercompany.com; St. Thomas Floral Design, SLC, stthomasfloraldesign.com
ON TREND Pages 50-52 Arthur Dyson Architect, arthurdyson.com; Belle Kurudzija, Lisman Studio, lismanstudio. com; Bernhardt, bernhardt.com; Crate & Barrel, Murray, crateandbarrel.com; Ethan Allen, SLC, ethanallen.com; Jayson Home, jaysonhome. com; Jonathan Adler, jonathanadler.com; LMK Interior Design, SLC, lmkinteriordesign.com; Light Spot Modern Design, SLC, lightspotmoderndesign.com; Lloyd Architects, SLC, lloyd-arch.com; San Francisco Design, SLC and Park City, sanfrandesign.com; Susan Taggart Design, SLC, 801-583-0710; Ward & Child—The Garden Store, SLC, 801-595-6622
CITY SCENE Pages 54-56 City Home Collective, SLC, cityhomecollective.com
124
U TA H S T Y L E A N D D E S I G N . C O M
Open House Armed with a vision and an A-list team of pros, Phil and Mauri Hansen create a Holladay home designed for entertaining in chic style and absolute comfort. BY BRAD MEE
84
PHOTOS BY RUSSELL CHANDLER FORD
U TA H S T Y L E A N D D E S I G N . C O M
Homeowner Mauri Hansen pauses in the living room and looks out upon the pool and patio. Elizabeth Wixom and Kimberly Rasmussen custom designed contemporary versions of traditional furnishings including shapely wing chairs and a large-scale patterned rug. Opposite: In the light-filled entry, a wall of saw-cut limestone backs a custom table crafted by Chamberlain.
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OPEN HOUSE Pages 84-91 Interior design: Elizabeth Kimberly Design,SLC, elizabethkimberlydesign.com; Architect: John Shirley, Think Architecture, SLC, thinkaec.com; Contractor and millwork: Jackson & LeRoy, SLC, jacksonandleroy.com; Landscape design: Jayson King, Landform Design Group, SLC, landformdesigngroup. com; Landscape installation: Big Rock Landscaping, SLC, bigrockinc.com; Built-in
85
Cabinetry: Craftsman Kitchens, SLC, craftsmankitchens.com; Metal work: Ryan Lewis, Meta Designs, metadesignsslc.com; Countertops: European Marble & Granite, SLC, europeanmarbleandgranite.net; Flooring: KT Hardwoods, West Jordan, kthardwoods.com Page 84 ENTRY Console table: designed by Elizabeth Kimberly Design, SLC, elizabethkimberlydesign.com; fabricated by Chamberlain Cabinetry, SLC, chamberlaincabinetry.com; Rug: Regency Royale, SLC, regencyroyale.com Page 85 and 87 Living Room Rug: Regency Royale, SLC, regencyroyale.com; Cocktail table: custom design by Elizabeth Kimberly Design, SLC, elizabethkimberlydesign.com; fabricated by Chamberlain Cabinetry, SLC, chamberlaincabinetry.com; Chandelier: custom design by Elizabeth Kimberly Design, SLC,elizabethkimberlydesign.com; fabricated by Wasatch Lighting, wasatchlighting.com; Sofa: custom design by Elizabeth Kimberly Design, SLC,elizabethkimberlydesign.com; fabricated by Keith Hottinger upholstery, SLC, keithhottinger.com Page 86 Dining Room Dining table: Crafted by Chamberlain Cabinetry, SLC, chamberlaincabinetry.com; China cabinet: custom design by Elizabeth Kimberly Design, SLC, elizabethkimberlydesign.com; crafted by Craftsman Kitchens, SLC, craftsmankitchens. com; Curved benches, custom design by Elizabeth Kimberly Design, SLC,elizabethkimberlydesign.com; fabricated by Markells Upholstery and Furniture, Bountiful, markellsupholstery.com Page 88 Master Bathroom Cabinetry and vanity: Craftsman Kitchens, SLC, craftsmankitchens.com; Faucets: Waterworks, Mountain Land Design, SLC, mountainlanddesign.com; Countertops: European Marble & Granite, SLC, europeanmarbleandgranite.net Page 88-89 Master Bedroom Bed: custom design by Elizabeth Kimberly Design, SLC, elizabethkimberlydesign.com; fabricated by Markells Upholstery and Furniture, Bountiful, markellsupholstery.com; Bedside lamps: Visual Comfort, visualcomfort. com; Chandelier: Global Views, globalviews. com; Desk and chair: custom design by Elizabeth Kimberly Design, SLC, elizabethkimberlydesign.com; fabricated by Call’s Design, SLC, callsdesign.com; Sitting room sofas: custom design by Elizabeth Kimberly Design, SLC,
SOURCES elizabethkimberlydesign.com; fabricated by Keith Hottinger upholstery, SLC, keithhottinger.com Page 90 Kitchen Island lights: custom design by Elizabeth Kimberly Design, SLC, elizabethkimberlydesign.com; fabricated by Wasatch Lighting, wasatchlighting.com; Backsplash and countertops: European Marble & Granite, SLC, europeanmarbleandgranite. net; Custom hardware: custom design by Elizabeth Kimberly Design, SLC, elizabethkimberlydesign.com; fabricated by Meta Designs, metadesignsslc.com Page 91 Library Custom rug, Regency Royale, SLC, regencyroyale.com; Table: custom design by Elizabeth Kimberly Design, SLC,elizabethkimberlydesign.com; fabricated by Chamberlain Cabinetry, SLC, chamberlaincabinetry.com; Host chairs: custom design by Elizabeth Kimberly Design, SLC,elizabethkimberlydesign.com; fabricated by Markells Upholstery and Furniture, Bountiful, markellsupholstery.com Page 91 Powder Room Sconces: Visual Comfort, visualcomfort.com; Wallcovering: Phillip Jeffries, phillipjeffries.com
Saving Grace A fresh mix of vintage and modern elements transform a timeworn 1937 Georgian Cottage into a gracious, highstyle home in Salt Lake’s Federal Heights neighborhood.
A
BY BRAD MEE
PHOTOS BY SCOT ZIMMERMAN
fter more than a year of scouring Salt Lake City for a fixer-upper, designer Gregg Hodson and his partner Gary McClellan finally found a diamond-in-the-rough dream home in the city’s Federal Heights neighborhood. “We were looking for a sad sack that needed to be totally redone,” Hodson explains. Within a day after discovering the neglected property, the couple had purchased and taken possession of the small 1937 shingled Georgian Cottage. “Even though it was a mess, I could see that it could be transformed into an amazing and gracious gem,“ says Hodson, who had renovated many homes for clients and relished the challenge. This house would provide many.
92
In the living room, draperies tailored from Lee Jofa raw silk deliver a shock of color against walls and trim painted in contrasting finishes of darkened Galveston Grey by Benjamin Moore. “Painting the trim dark helps create a cozy, den-like feel,” Gregg Hodson says.
authenticwoodfloors.com Page 93-94 Living Room Custom cocktail table: Gregg Hodson Interior Design, C.G. Sparks and Cordell Taylor, SLC, gregghodsondesign.com; Customized console: Mod a Go Go and Calls Design, SLC, callsdesign.com; Arm chairs: Hickory Chair, hickorychair.com; Fireplace art: A Gallery, SLC, agalleryonline.com; Drapery fabric: Lee Jofa, The Showroom, SLC, leejofa.com Page 95-96 Dining Room Dining table: West Elm, SLC, westelm.com ; Lillian August host chairs: Hamilton Park Interiors, Murray, hamiltonparkut.com; Floss chandelier: Light Spot Modern Design, SLC, lightspotmoderndesign.com; Rug: Artifacts, SLC, artifacts.ws Page 97 Kitchen Cabinets: Calls Design, SLC, callsdesign.com; Hardware: Restoration Hardware, SLC, restorationhardware.com; Above-island lights, Hinkley Lighting, hinkleylighting.com; Tile: Daltile, SLC, daltile.com; Caesarstone counterops: European Marble & Granite, SLC, europeanmarbleandgranite.com Page 98 Landing Teak cabinet: CG Sparks, SLC, cgsparks.com Page 99 Master Bedroom Jessica Charles wing chairs: Hamilton Park Interiors, Murray, hamiltonparkut.com; Robert Allen drapery fabric: The Showroom, SLC, robertallendesign.com; Conrad blinds: Kneedler Fauchere, kneedlerfauchere.com Page 99 Guest Bathroom Cabinets: Calls Design, SLC, callsdesign.com Floor and wall tile: Daltile, SLC, daltile.com
Left: Located near the top of Salt Lake City’s historic South Temple, the small cottage was built in 1937. New exterior colors and a front door in glossy black hint at the interior’s captivating style.
U TA H S T Y L E A N D D E S I G N . C O M
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SAVING GRACE Pages 92-99 Interior Design: Gregg Hodson, Gregg Hodson Interior Design, SLC, gregghodsondesign.com; Kitchen design and cabinetry: Gregg Hodson, Gregg Hodson Interior Design, SLC, gregghodsondesign.com; Calls Design, SLC, callsdesign.com; Millwork: Bringaurd Millworks, SLC, bringard.com; Windows: Contractor Window Supply, SLC, cwswindows. com; Countertops: European Marble & Granite, SLC, europeanmarbleandgranite.net; Wood floors: Authentic Wood Floors Inc., SLC,
Balancing Act Enlisting a team of talented Utah pros, Floridians Andy and Sherry Sturner build a spectacular Park City home boasting equal parts mountain and modern styles. BY NATALIE TAYLOR
100
PHOTOS BY SCOT ZIMMERMAN
U TA H S T Y L E A N D D E S I G N . C O M
The stacked Idaho ledgestone fireplace, accented with a banded iron mantel and composite stone hearth, serves as the focal point of the sophisticated, yet casual, great room. Opposite: The breathtaking porte-cochere serves as not only a formal covered entry but also as a stunning architectural element. It introduces the home’s design palette—a mix of texture, tone and elements including stone, metal and glass. .
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Craig Construction Company, Park City, craigconstruction.com; Furnishings: LMK Interior Design, SLC, lmkinteriordesign.com Page 100 Exterior Outdoor cube chandeliers: LMK Interior Design, SLC, lmkinteriordesign.com Page 101-102 Living Room Banded iron mantel on stacked Idaho ledgestone fireplace: Ornamental Elegance, SLC, ornamentalelegance.net; Hickory floors: Richard Marshall Fine Flooring, oldeboards. com; Henredon sofas, Bolier cocktail and occasional tables, Visual Comfort floor lamps, tai Ping rug: LMK Interior Design, SLC, lmkinteriordesign.com Page 103 Entry Fine Art chandelier, Lillian August mirror and Ralph Lauren table lamps: LMK Interior Design, SLC, lmkinteriordesign.com Page 104 Dining Room Bolier Klismos chairs, Fine Arts chandelier: LMK Interior Design, SLC, lmkinteriordesign. com; Dining table: Forever Furniture Inc., West Jordan, foreverfurnitureinc.com Page 105-106 Kitchen Rifted oak cabinets: Cottonwood Fine Kitchen Furniture, Draper, cottonwoodcabinets.com; Calcutta marble countertop and banquette Caesarstone tabletop : Distinctive Marble and Granite, SLC, distinctivemarbleandgranite.net; Swivel counter stools: Bolier, LMK Interior Design, SLC, lmkinteriordesign.com; Fine Art chandelier and Bolier Klismos chairs: LMK Interior Design, SLC, lmkinteriordesign.com Page 106 Master Bathroom White lacquer cabinetry: Cottonwood Fine Kitchen Furniture, Draper, cottonwoodcabinets.com; Side-lit mirrors: Mountain Land Design, SLC, mountainlanddesign.com Page 106 Master Bedroom Rustic contemporary 4-post bed with combed wood and metal detailing: Lillian August, Baker Furniture ottoman, Visual Comfort table lamp, Bolier lounge chair and bedside chest: LMK Interior Design, SLC, lmkinteriordesign.com
BALANCING ACT
DINING IN & OUT
Pages 100-107 Interior Design: LMK Interior Design, SLC, lmkinteriordesign.com; Architect: Otto Walker Architects, Park City, otto-walker.com; Builder:
Pages 109-111 Aquarius Fish Co., SLC, aquariusfish.com; Provisions, SLC, slcprovisions.com; Wood board: $60, C.G. Sparks, SLC, cgsparks.com
USD (ISSN 1941-2169) Utah Style & Design is published quarterly (Winter, Spring, Summer and Fall) by Utah Partners Publishing, L.L.P. Editorial, advertising and administrative office: 515 S. 700 East, Suite 3i, Salt Lake City, UT 84102. Telephone: 801-485-5100; fax 801-485-5133. Periodicals Postage Paid at Salt Lake City and at additional mailing offices. Subscriptions: One year ($9.95); two years ($17.95); outside the continental U.S. add $20 a year. Toll-free subscription number: 855-276-4395. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to Utah Style & Design/Subscription Dept., 1745 Greens Road, Houston, TX 77032-9945. Copyright 2014, JES Publishing Corp. No whole or part of the contents may be reproduced in any manner without prior permission of Utah Style & Design, excepting individually copyrighted articles and photographs. Manuscripts accompanied by SASE are accepted, but no responsibility will be assumed for unsolicited contributions.
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Heather Nan Photography
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Ideas • Inspiration • Resources on newsstands now
ACCENTS
Looking Sharp Y
Glass inkpots and box, $40, brass cup, $32, vintage pencil and boxes, $10 each, wood drawer tray, $120; C.G. Sparks, SLC; pencils and brass holder set, $79, Alice Lane Home Collection, SLC; Faber-Castell black acrylic 2-piece desk cup, $25; FaberCastell Perfect Pencil with sharpener SLC; Tabula Rosa, SLC.
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U TA H S T Y L E A N D D E S I G N . C O M
PHOTO BY ADAM FINKLE
our pencils are likely lost in the kitchen scissors drawer and the kids’ coloring box, but let’s put a stop to that now: Think of pencils as decorative accessories with an IQ. As fashionable as they are functional, sharp pencils and their stylish containers look ultra smart when displayed in the open. More to the point, when you need a pencil, you won’t have to rummage around to find it.
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