Utah Style & Design Fall 2019

Page 1

Berry

The Season’s Hottest Color

SAVVY KITCHEN STYLE ways to 10 welcome

Autumn

dream it,

CREATE IT Amazing Homes: Holladay to Park City,

Historic Avenues to Mount Pleasant


ENGAGING Immerse yourself in the relaxed luxury of Red Ledges There are countless ways to engage with nature, with neighbors, and with the things you love to do at Red Ledges. Share a round of golf, take a tennis clinic, zip down the 144 ft pool slide, enjoy an elegant double-date dinner at Juniper Grill, find your Zen with yoga, discover new flavors in a cooking class, breathe the fresh air on a guided hike or bike ride, find your inner cowboy on a guided trail ride, or simply relax by the pool or the firepit. At Red Ledges, neighbors become friends and activities become passions, and the pace of life is as vibrant or relaxed as you’d like. Learn more about the Red Ledges lifestyle and homebuilding opportunities at RedLedges.com or call 877.733.5334, and visit to experience Red Ledges.

Homesites from $175K to $1M

Homes from $775K to $6M


LISTEN TO HEATHER OSMOND HOST THE

REAL ESTATE SHOW EVERY SATURDAY FROM 11AM-12PM

“These are a few of my favorite things!”

– HEATHER OSMOND

151 E STATE STREET, LEHI • (801) 766-6448 1660 NO. STATE STREET, OREM • (801) 225-2555 FASHION PLACE 6191 S. STATE STREET, MURRAY • 833-OSMONDS

BEST OF UTAH VALLEY BEST DECOR & INTERIOR DESIGN 1ST PLACE

2019 BEST OF HOUZZ WINNER INTERIOR DESIGN SERVICE

2019 BEST OF STATE WINNER INTERIOR DESIGN FURNITURE HOME DECOR

Designer Brand Fur niture At Guaranteed Lowest Prices!



LUCKY MOVE COLLECTION




L M K interior design We are committed to the principles of simplicity and modernism to enhance the homes natural beauty.

4626 S. Highland Drive - SLC, UT 84117 - 801.272.9121 - Palm Springs, CA - 760.325.2959 @lmkinteriordesign www.lmkinteriordesign.com


801-565-1654 7940 SOUTH 1300 W, WEST JORDAN, UTAH 84088 PEPPERTREEKITCHEN.COM


CACTUS & TROPICALS plants

containers

design

service

gifts

ss uurr rro o uu nn dd yo you u rr s se e ll ff w w iitthh ggrreeeenn cactusandtropicals.com SALT LAKE CITY

DRAPER

801.485.2542


Designer: Marian Rockwood Interior Design

www.EuropeanMarbleAndGranite.com


LIVE YOUR STYLE

ivyinteriorsutah.com

801.486.2257

3174 S. Highland Dr. Salt Lake City, UT 84106


www.jacksonandleroy.com

801.277.3927



Sometimes the best way to visualize your next kitchen is to touch, hear, and taste it.

Open drawers. Turn knobs. Light burners. Welcome to a showroom unlike any other– a dynamic space to test-drive appliances, take classes, and taste every delicious possibility.

Salt Lake City • 1400 S. Foothill Drive, Suite 212, Salt Lake City, UT 84108 • 801-582-5552 • subzero-wolf.com /saltlakecity



ARCHITECTURE

CONSTRUCTION

INTERIORS

4490 N. Forestdale Drive Suite 202 Park City, UT 84098 jaffagroup.com 435.615.6873


TWO REASONS WHY YOUR INTERIORS NEED TO BE PROTECTED BY FIBER-SEAL

Are Yours Protected?

Fiber-Seal of Utah | Salt Lake City, UT | (801) 577-8037 | www.Utah.FiberSeal.com Salt Lake | Davis | Summit | Wasatch | Utah Counties


THE FINE LINE BETWEEN

FURNITURE AND ART With the core belief that furniture should be fine art, Bernhardt Furniture Company has been crafting luxury furniture lines for more than a century. And for the first time ever, Bernhardt has a standalone store in Utah, bringing its blend of classic comfort and artistic luxury to a brand-new audience.

V I S I T O U R F I R S T- E V E R S TA N DA L ON E S HOW RO OM AT 5251 SOU T H STAT E ST R EET I N M U R R AY

W W W. B E R N H A R D T U T A H . C O M 8 01. 26 3.1292


Whether you’re looking for a signature design element or simply want your next project to have an added “wow” factor, more attention to your window and door design choices goes a long way. Let light pour into a room in a unique way, or add a contemporary, textured finish to exterior trim. It’s a sure way to enhance the value of your projects and your reputation.

For more information, call (801) 973-7170, or email: SaltLakeSales@spi-ind.com www.SierraPacificWindows.com

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P.O. Box 8489, Red Bluff, CA 96080

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800-824-7744

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A Division of


PHOTO TREVOR MUHLER

FALL 2019 | VOLUME 23 | NUMBER 4

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66 HOUSE WARMING BY BRAD MEE

Ten reasons autumn is your home’s favorite season.

74 A PERFECT FIT BY BRAD MEE

ON THE COVER

PHOTOS BY SCOT ZIMMERMAN

Inspired by its tiny lot, a new pint-sized Avenues home takes on big living and style, thanks to the deft design of architect Dallas Davis.

COVER IMAGE BY TREVOR MUHLER

Daring architecture defines a new home in Mount Pleasant.

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96 RANCH DRESSING BY BRAD MEE

PHOTOS BY LUCY CALL

For a family retreat in scenic Wolf Creek Ranch, Rion Locke and Richard Miller craft a mountain home that marries the best of rustic chic and clean-lined contemporary styles.

IS WHERE 108 HOME THE ART IS BY TESSA WOOLF

PHOTOS BY SCOT ZIMMERMAN AND

ELEGANCE & EASE BY BRAD MEE PHOTOS BY DEREK ISRAELSEN

In Holladay, traditional and modern find common ground in a beautiful family home.

TREVOR MUHLER

On a sprawling ranch in Mount Pleasant, Sam and Diane Stewart weave together family history, Western art and contemporary design to build their dream home on the range.

FA L L 2 0 1 9 | U TA H S T Y L E A N D D E S I G N

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CONTENTS |

FALL 2019

DEPARTMENTS 44

COLOR CRUSH

BERRY PICKING SEASON BY BRAD MEE

Loving today’s reds but want something less razzledazzle, more comforting and moody? Deep berry tones deliver.

48

IN THE KITCHEN

WINNING RECIPE BY BRAD MEE PHOTOS BY JARED MEDLEY

In Pleasant Grove, a team of pros cook up a familyfriendly kitchen loaded with smart design and Belgianinspired decorative details.

121

DINING IN & OUT

THE SWEET NEW STAPLE BY MARY BROWN MALOUF

40

PHOTOS BY ADAM FINKLE

It used to be that sweet potatoes showed up just for the holidays. These days, they’re daily fare and we couldn’t be happier.

124 DESIGN

DIRECTORY A resourceful guide of materials, places and products

126 SOURCES The design pros and products featured in this issue.

128

HOT LIST

CHUNK OF CHANGE Looking for a bold way to anchor your room with simple style? Choose a chunky wood piece that delivers a heavy dose of natural warmth and beauty without any overworked details or distractions.

style file EDITOR’S PICK MOST WANTED SHOP TALK DISH NEW AND NOTEWORTHY ROOM SERVICE WANDERLUST

31 32 34 36

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38 40 42

Find more design inspiration at utahstyleanddesign.com 36

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Anne-Marie Barton CLASSICAL ROOTS MODERN EXPRESSION

AMB D

INTERIOR DESIGN AND INSPIRATION AL VIDEOS 801.272.8680

AMB@AMBDESIGNINC.COM

ANNEMARIEBARTON.COM

INSTAGRAM @ANNEMARIEBARTON

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S

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ONLINE

utahstyleanddesign.com More to See

Ever wish you could see more of the amazing homes we feature in these pages? Simply log on and enjoy extra photos of these remarkable residences, indoors and out.

STYLE NEWS

If you’re looking for ideas and inspiration for your home and gardens, we deliver right to your inbox. Visit our website and sign up for our monthly newsletter.

GET INSPIRED @utahstyleanddesign Follow us on Instagram to stay up-todate on Utah’s latest design trends.

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Take a stylish tour through Utah’s most spectacular spaces, from lux living rooms and gorgeous kitchens to showstopping entries and comfy dens—we have hundreds for you to see.


The 2019 Macan Bring a bolder look to your garage and driveway with the innovatively designed 2019 Porsche Macan. Abandon old trends and start something new with a compact SUV unlike any you’ve known before.

Porsche Lehi 3425 North Digital Drive Lehi, Utah 84043 Tel. 801.852.5400 www.PorscheLehi.com 25 miles south of Salt Lake

Š2019 Porsche Cars North America, Inc. Porsche recommends seat belt usage and observance of traffic laws at all times.


THE TEAM

PUBLISHER

ART DIRECTOR

DIRECTOR OF OPERATIONS

Margaret Mary Shuff

Jeanine Miller

Damon Shorter

EDITOR-IN-CHIEF

GRAPHIC DESIGNER

Brad Mee

Scott Peterson

FOOD EDITOR

STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER

Mary Brown Malouf

Adam Finkle

ASSISTANT EDITOR

PHOTOGRAPHY CONTRIBUTORS

Val Rasmussen

Lucy Call Derek Israelsen Jared Medley Trevor Muhler Rebekah Westover Scot Zimmerman

COPY EDITOR

Melissa Fields WRITING CONTRIBUTORS

Tessa Woolf Natalie Taylor

PRODUCTION MANAGER

Arianna Jimenez WEB EDITOR/SOCIAL MANAGER

Megan Bartholomew ACCOUNT EXECUTIVES

PRESIDENT & PUBLISHER

Margaret Mary Shuff EDITOR-IN-CHIEF

Janette Erickson Ashley Hebrew Emily Lopez Kristin McGary

Marie Speed CONTROLLER

Jeanne Greenberg PUBLISHERS OF

Salt Lake magazine Utah Bride & Groom Utah Style & Design Boca Raton magazine Worth Avenue magazine Mizner’s Dream Delray Beach magazine

515 S. 700 East, Suite 3-i, Salt Lake City, UT 84102 Phone

/ 801-485-5100

Fax

/ 801-485-5133

Email

/ magazine@utahstyleanddesign.com

Website

/ utahstyleanddesign.com

801-328-3245 buildingfromhere.com

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Your art collection will get jealous.

The diff erence is Gaggenau. Grand architecture demands grand interior pieces. Your wine climate cabinet, much like your collection, speaks to who you are. Every Gaggenau piece is distinctively designed, crafted from exceptional materials, off ers professional performance, and has done so since 1683. Make a statement: Gaggenau-usa.com

Authorized Partner

www.mountainlanddesign.com

Salt Lake City, UT

Provo, UT

Jackson, Wy

Boise, ID Sun Valley, Id


Twenty-Seven years of Furnishing your Home and Garden.

Stay in Touch There’s magic in the dirt.® 678 South 700 East

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801.595.6622

U TA H S T Y L E A N D D E S I G N | FA L L 2 0 1 9

Monday – Saturday 10:00 am – 6:00 pm

@utahstyledesign


Direct Importers of the World’s Finest Rugs

Welcome guests to your home with a rug change for the season!

At the Historic Villa Theater

We are a full-service rug company, featuring the world’s finest rugs. We specialize in new, antique, and semi-antique hand-woven masterpieces from all over the world with one of the largest selections in the country.

Adibs.com 3092 S Highland Dr, Salt Lake City 801-484-6364


EDITOR’S NOTE

About the Size of It I’m not going to offer my opinion on whether having a kitchen table that doubles as a bed is a path to domestic bliss, but I will say that when you have an opportunity to enjoy more by having less, you’d be crazy not to consider it. Enter downsizing. The concept is all the rage in today’s housing world, and for its advocates, smaller quarters mean less cumbersome, more walletand earth-friendly living. Of course, smaller is relative. For some, it means a tiny house on wheels. (Yes, that’s a loo in the shower.) For others, it means trading in a seven-bedroom home for one with three—plus a Murphy bed in the office. No question, interest in smaller dwellings is growing and even for those who favor larger houses, the integration of smaller cozy spots into their rooms is on the rise. Convenience, cost and comfort—whatever the motivation, it looks like size really does matter. For Dallas Davis (“A Perfect Fit,” page 74), it wasn’t a desire to live little that drove his home’s 720-squarefoot footprint, but rather the pint-sized property. For-

tunately, deft space planning and savvy details make his wee house a massive success. In “Winning Recipe” (page 48), the design team took a divide-and-conquer approach, splitting the large kitchen into separate work and pantry spaces. “If you break it up, it feels more intimate and homey,” designer Caitlin Creer explains. “Why Be Shy” (page 40) demonstrates design’s power to turn four petite powder rooms into huge style statements, while smaller intimate spots enhance this issue’s larger homes: a bantam banquette in Park City, charming window seats in Holladay and a welcoming sitting nook in Mount Pleasant. In the end, it’s the allure of style and livability that defines all of this issue’s homes. I invite you to enjoy the magazine from the comfort of yours, large or small.

BRAD MEE, EDITOR IN CHIEF

new exhibition

MY TH

on view

SEPT. 20 – OC T. 31

featuring

WREN ROSS

MI TC H M ANT L E

F IDALIS BUEHLER

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WALNUT GROVE COLLECTION by STICKLEY Coming this Fall to Forsey’s

Utah’s Premier Fine Furniture & Interior Design Showroom FORSEY’S TRADITIONAL & CONTEMPORARY 2977 South Highland Drive Salt Lake City, UT 84106

801.487.0777

FORSEY’S CRAFTSMAN HOUSE 2955 South Highland Drive Salt Lake City, UT 84106

801.463.0777

Mon-Sat 10 a.m. - 6 p.m. Closed Sunday | forseys.com


style file FALL | 2019

PHOTO COURTESY OF NATIVE TRAILS

LAZY? HARDLY. The name-gods haven’t been kind to the turntable server. Lazy Susan? Dumbwaiter? That’s no way to show appreciation for this centuries-old serving essential. Of course, the hardworking device has gone through the rounds in popularity—all the rage in the ‘50s and ‘60s, but since frowned upon as kitsch rather than cool. Native Trails intends to end that here and now with its new hammered-copper version. Crafted from recycled copper and available in numerous sizes, it’s suitable for small café tables to enormous, stone-topped islands alike. Native Trails Copper Lazy Susan, starting at $325, Mountain Land Design, SLC

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MOST WANTED Colemena Group offices, design by cityhomeCOLLECTIVE, SLC

Fitzgerald loveseat, $1,695, Madison McCord Interiors, SLC

Rectangular tufted ottoman, starts at $2,661, Gatehouse No. 1, Orem PHOTO KERRI FUKUI

A TUFT ACT TO FOLLOW From shallow and sophisticated to dramatically dimpled, fresh twists on traditional tufting modernize this classic, old-world design element.

Jonathan stool, starting at $1,155, Alice Lane Home Collection, SLC

Cosima channel tufted swivel chair, $869, Crate & Barrel, Murray

Traverse leather cocktail ottoman, $1,499, Osmond Designs, Orem and Lehi

Tribeca Chair by Jean De Merry, to the trade, John Brooks Inc., SLC

Marion leather king-sized bed, $6,499, San Francisco Design, SLC Mrs. Godfrey chair, $1,895, Jonathan Adler, jonathanadler.com

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SHOP TALK

Jenny Larsen

THE AUTOBIOGRAPHY OF OBJECTS Say hello to St. George’s newest décor hub. Designer Jenny Larsen and husband Eric Hovland love a good hunt. For years, the St. George couple has been snatching up unique vintage and consignment goods nationwide for their locally celebrated St. George stores, Urban Renewal and Having-Been-Ness. In the 16,000 square-foot, adjoining spaces, the duo masterfully curate and display their wallet-friendly finds, ranging from repurposed and custom home furnishings to fun fashions. Customers depart with everything from lux sectionals to mid-century tables, swank jean jackets to vinyl records. And for those needing delivery service between Las Vegas and SLC, the cost is simple: baked goods. Yup, beds delivered for biscuits, credenzas for cakes. “You’re inspired, you can afford it and you can get it home,” says Hovland. “We make it real and we make it fun.” Recently, the innovative couple branched out and opened AO. While the shop is next door to their other downtown stores, it is worlds-away in style, product and presentation. “AO is more boutique, simpler and more perfected,” says Larsen, who stocks the shop with all-new products for the home, including custom furnishings, baskets, accessories and a wall’s worth of piled pillows. For those who entertain, there are farm tables and shelves topped with cutting boards, cheese knives, metal bowls, ceramic plates and more. The vibe is laid-back yet sophisticated. “These aren’t just things,” Larsen explains. “They create your living environment and reflect you and your style. That is why we named it AO. This is your autobiography of objects.” 23 E. St. George Blvd, St. George, @autobiographyofobjects

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DISH

EASY PICKINGS Offer your guests a bite of abundance, peace, wisdom and purity. In other words, an olive. Olives are an ancient species—the tree had its origins some 20 to 40 million years ago— and have been eaten by humans for say, 6,000 years, give or take. It's not surprising so much symbolism has become attached to them. Part of almost every cocktail party menu, they can also provide a conversation starter. At such occasions, just Google “olive.” “Hey, did you know that olives were the source of the Minoans’ wealth?” you might ask casually. Or, “By the way, an olive tree in Croatia is 1,600 years old and still bears edible olives!” Okay, maybe it's just best to chat about the weather. Know enough to put together an interesting selection. Most grocery stores feature an olive bar now, and naturally SLC's gourmet store stars—Caputo's Market & Deli and Liberty Heights Fresh—have great selections and knowledgeable sales people.

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Entertaining season calls for simple pantry-to-party snacks. Let’s talk olives.

Royal Herculean Great big olives from Arcadia are unpasteurized so they retain more tannins than many other olives.

Lucques Lucques is a cultivar of olives grown primarily in Languedoc in France. It is primarily used as a green table olive with a bright, tart flavor.

Alfonso Alfonso olives are considered Chilean, though they’re influenced by Peruvian culture. Huge, purple and brine-cured, then macerated in red wine.

Arbequina Little, rosy-brown olives, often found with stems attached, are highly aromatic. Mostly grown in Catalonia, Spain, also found in Aragon and Andalusia, as well as California, Argentina and Chile.

Tournante Dark olives simply cured for several months in sea salt brine for a purely fruity olive flavor.

Kalamata Everybody’s favorite Greek olives, used in salads, cheeses and all kinds of cooked dishes. Usually preserved in red wine vinegar and olive oil, they have a beautiful purple skin.

PHOTOS ADAM FINKLE. TABLE LINENS FROM WILLIAM SONOMA, SLC.

style file |


Selection, Value and Style all under one roof!

Furniture | Electronics | Appliances | Flooring | Mattresses Open 11 Hours A Day • 6 Days A Week Monday-Saturday 10am – 9pm • Closed Sundays Shop online at rcwilley.com.


style file |

NEW AND NOTEWORTHY

GET THE LOOK

ROOMS WITH A VIEW

Wall-fabulous, wallet-friendly murals are yours for the hanging.

A new book celebrates Zuber’s scenic wallpapers.

Since 1797, Zuber & Cie—a renowned French wallpaper and fabric manufacturer—has been making a scene in many of the most beautiful homes in the world. In his new book Zuber, Two Centuries of Panoramic Wallpaper (Gibbs-Smith, $75), author Brian D. Coleman reveals a reverence for history and an adoration for scenic Zuber wallpapers that are made with the same paint formulas, antique woodblocks and processes today as they were centuries ago. More than 300 photos showcase spectacular interiors enlivened by expansive portrayals of lush flora and fauna, dynamic architectural details and settings from the histories of locales worldwide. Naturally, there is a castle and chateau in the mix, but the inclusion of contemporary townhomes and a chic modern apartment proves that panoramic papers have a place in all kinds of homes, perhaps even yours.

Take Note

Textile Designer Lori Weitzner Spreads her Wings Leave it to Lori Weitzner to make note cards even more special. After all, she has been doing this for our interiors with her texture-rich textiles, wall coverings and passementerie for years. Yup, the same dimensional treatments that differentiate her exquisite decorative offerings—beading, leafing, embroidery and innovative folds—now elevate the style of cards she creates with Papyrus. In her book Ode To Color (Harper Design, $50), Weitzner delves deeply into 10 intoxicating palettes with spectacular images and charming narration, so it’s not surprising that she harnesses their hues to enrich her new collection of paper and gift-giving goods, as well. Papyrus, City Creek Center, SLC

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Judarn mural, $298, Anthropologie, SLC, anthropologie.com

The Wild Sonoma Coast, $305, Minted, minted.com

Landscape mural wallpaper, $349, West Elm, westelm.com


LOVE YOUR HOME

Salt Lake (801) 467-2701 2970 Highland Dr. Park City (435) 645-7072 1890 Bonanza Dr. M.-Sat. 10-6. Sundays and evenings by appt.

www.sanfrandesign.com

Utah’s contemporary furniture and design leader for nearly 40 years.


style file |

ROOM SERVICE

WHY BE SHY?

1.

2.

3.

4.

1. Raised-panel wainscoting—brush-painted in Benjamin Moore’s Fiddlehead Green—delivers a dramatic backdrop for the gold-framed mirror, Herbeau faucet and antique French garden wall sink furnishing this unique powder room in Holladay. Design and build by The Fox Group.

2. Inside the Vivint Courtside suite at Vivint Smart Home Arena, a floating wall with an integrated white quartz sink and cutouts fronts a backlit wall of frosted acrylic framed with raw steel. Tile resembling black, textured concrete clads a nearby wall. Design and build by Ezra Lee Design + Build.

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3. An envelope of deep-blue, crocodile skin-embossed wallcovering teams with a modern vanity of marble and satin brass in a Montage Residence’s chic powder room. Design by Jennifer Chipman, Alder & Tweed Design. 4. In a Park City home, a marble runner moves down the back wall and across the floor of a porcelain tile-clad powder room, stopping in the middle to form a spectacular, custom pedestal sink. The sculpture-like sink is framed with floating cabinets and Leucos wall sconces. Design by Marian Rockwood, MHR Design.

PHOTOS BY SCOT ZIMMERMAN (1 AND 4), MEAGAN LARSEN (2), DOUG BURKE (3)

Four Utah powder rooms tip the scales of fearless design.


Olympus Cove

Tuhaye

4544 Abinadi Drive 3 BD / 4 BA / 8,108 SF Offered at $6,900,000

Tyler Parrish 801.815.5765

Promontory

9110 Uinta Drive 5 BD / 7 BA / 5,770 SF Offered at $3,495,000

Matthew Sidford 435.962.4544

14726 Aulani Cove

Federal Heights

Emigration Canyon

Kari Koyle Patty Horie 801.450.0888 435.640.0400

7 BD / 8 BA / 7,861 SF Offered at $2,195,000

Old Town Park City

148mainstreet.com

148 Main Street 4 BD / 5 BA / 3,100 SF Offered at $3,300,000

Tom Ward 435.647.3727

Millcreek

Draper

7518 Sage Meadow Drive 5 BD / 6 BA / 5,594 SF Offered at $2,800,000

9110uinta.com

Lisa Dimond 801.514.3995

3500 Hillside Lane 5 BD / 3 BA / 5,331 SF Offered at $1,895,000

Cameron Sorensen Cherie Major 801.688.7776 801.557.5627

Holladay

1410 E South Temple Street

522 N Marathon Circle

2186 Glen Haven Lane

Cottonwood Heights

Holladay

Coalville

5 BD / 4 BA / 4,176 SF Offered at $1,390,000

6822 S Vista Grande 7 BD / 5 BA / 6,427 SF Offered at $1,025,000

Buyer to verfiy all info.

Taylor Lake 801.558.0714

Eunice Lane 801.231.3338

5 BD / 7 BA / 6,850 SF Starting in the $1,399,000

Mimi Sinclair 801.580.6089

1849 E Cottonwood Club Cir. 5 BD / 3 BA / 4,1702 SF Offered at $1,000,000

Brad Hansen 801.230.5236

4 BD / 3 BA / 6,453 SF Offered at $1,150,000

Jim Bringhurst 801.558.6336

794 S West Hoytsville Rd. 4 BD / 4 BA / 4,900 SF Offered at $900,000

see all of our listings online at winutah.com

Patty Horie 435.640.0400


style file |

WANDERLUST

GROUNDS FOR CELEBRATION Five Reasons Bloedel Reserve Should Be on Your Holiday Hit List Planning a weekend getaway this holiday season? A garden-focused escape might seem an untimely choice, but the verdant Bloedel Reserve located on Bainbridge Island—just a 35-minute ferry ride from Seattle, Washington—will change your mind. The 150-acre forest reserve and public gardens are a living tapestry of meadows, water features, woodlands and landscaped gardens that range from a serene Japanese Garden and guest house to the largest public moss garden in the United States. Connecting these and the other of the Reserve’s 14 breathtaking landscapes are beautifully manicured paths, fanciful footbridges, deeply shaded trails and sweeping views of Puget Sound. Sure, Bloedel is an obvious option during the Northwest’s mild summer season, but we love it later in the year. Here are five of the many reasons you will too.

1. THE JOURNEY Leave the bustle of Seattle behind. Armed with an overnight bag and a hot cocoa, ferry to the quiet charm of Bainbridge Island. The tiny main town is rich with quaint shops, inns and restaurants.

2. NO CROWDS Summer’s tourist season is long gone, making a visit to Bainbridge and the Bloedel Reserve a more serene and special getaway.

3. THE HOLIDAY VILLAGE Miniature houses, buildings and electric trains fill the stately residence at Bloedel Reserve. Decorated trees, adorned mantels, hot cocoa and cookies add to the home’s holiday cheer.

4. SOLSTICE WALKS Experience the preserve on a staff-led stroll through the dark gardens and grounds, led by the light of handheld lanterns. Family nights welcome children; adult nights celebrate silence. Limited availability, dates and times.

THE BLOEDEL RESERVE

BAINBRIDGE ISLAND

SEATTLE

PUGET SOUND

5. PLANT LIFE Sure, it’s winter and the blooms are off the rhododendrons, but Bloedel’s grounds boast a magical tapestry of lush greens, delicate blooms, rich textures and a soft light that makes the season special. Details at bloedelreserve.org

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Cozy Up.

jefflandrydesign.com • 339 Pierpont Avenue Salt Lake City, UT 84101 • 801 533 8530


COLOR CRUSH

Berry Picking Season Loving today’s reds but want something less razzle-dazzle, more comforting and moody? Deep berry tones deliver. From wine to cherry, plum to raspberry, these saturated hues satisfy cravings for seductive, cozy colors that can rouse a room without overwhelming it. BY BR A D M EE

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5

6

4

2

1

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PHOTO ADAM FINKLE

3


WORK YOUR WALLS

Radicchio No. 96 Farrow & Ball

Dark Burgundy 2075-10 Benjamin Moore

Cherries Jubilee SW 6862 Sherwin-Williams

Cherry Berry DE 5034 Dunn-Edwards

Wine Not MQ1-02 Behr

8

9

15 14

10 11

12

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Left to right: 1. Croco from thesign 2. Sinta Ruby from Zoffany 3. Clark from Sahco 4. Balmoral from Casamance 5. Jarabina from Raoul Textiles 6. Royal Velvet from thesign 7. Crosstown from Donghia 8. Lennox from thesign 9. Impuntura from Brochier 10. Decadence from Donghia 11. Caresse from Casamance 12. Balboa from Sahco 13. Up and Down from Donghia 14. Cappella from thesign 15. Vendramin from Rubelli. All fabrics available to the trade, John Brooks Inc., SLC. FA L L 2 0 1 9 | U TA H S T Y L E A N D D E S I G N

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COLOR CRUSH

3

2

1

BERRY BEAUTIFUL

5

Rich and sophisticated, lively and lux — berry tones are all the rage on runways and inside stylish rooms alike. 8

1. Montegrapa Felicita fountain pen in Red Velvet, $250, Tabula Rasa, SLC 2. Lumiere chandelier, Jean de Merry, to the trade, John Brooks, Inc., SLC 3. Doric pillow, $91, Vintage velvet burgundy pillow, $249, Glass House, SLC 4. King George settee by Baker, $14,999 plus fabric, LMK Interior Design, SLC 5. Campbell table, $2,795, Jayson Home, jaysonhome.com 6. Reading glasses, $26, Tabula Rasa, SLC 7. Ole Lynggard Copenhagen leather bracelets, $315 each; sweet drops, starting at $1,100 each, O.C. Tanner Jewelers, SLC 8. Alpaca scarves, $45 each Ward & Child—The Garden Store, SLC

6

7 Perlite wallpaper in Ruby and Antique Brass, Anthology from Style Library, stylelibrary.com

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TOM FORD FALL 2019 READY TO WEAR (PHOTO COURTESY OF VOGUE.COM)

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terrazzo Past to the Present

venetian tile & stone gallery our stone, your style... We ship material Nationwide & Overseas Visit our unique selection of slabs and tile at our showrooms 17275 Daimler | Irvine Ca 92614 | 949.261.0146

825 West 2400 South | Salt lake City, UT 84119 | 801.977.8888

www.venetianstonegallery.com


KITCHEN DESIGN

WINNING

recipe

In Pleasant Grove, a team of pros cooks up a familyfriendly kitchen loaded with smart design and Belgianinspired decorative details. BY BR A D M EE PHOTOS BY JA R ED M EDL EY

D

esign inspiration comes from countless places, and for the owners of this Pleasant Grove home, the influential source was time spent in Belgium and the Netherlands. “We borrowed from the region’s simple and classic styles,” says interior designer Caitlin Creer, who joined the homeowners, Casey Cloward from Raykon Construction and Landforms Design to create the family’s dream house. And at its core, a welcoming kitchen serves as the most used and treasured space. On the surface, the kitchen reads farmhouse, but with a more timeless rather than of-themoment style. “We chose more classic details that don’t box it in to be cliché,” Creer explains. “They’re the hallmark of the design.” A dose of traditional, a measure of modern and heavy pours of charming detail mix to make this busy space as pretty as it is practical.

Floor Plan A functional floor plan divides the large, open kitchen into a work zone, casual at-thecounter dining spot and a spacious pantry—all designed to cater to the active family and their love for entertaining. The central work area is

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“Open shelves are a great spot for placing everyday bowls and glassware, making them easy to access,” says interior designer Caitlin Creer. She backed open shelves between the integrated refrigerator and freezer with hand-painted tiles by Tabarka Studio.


Hidden Appliances Custom door panels camouflage the refrigerator and freezer units, helping to maintain the room’s fluid design and uncluttered décor. The shelves, drawer chest and upper cubbies combine to create the look of a single, built-in cabinet.

Open Pantry Two doorless entries lead into the pantry, frame the range wall, and accentuate the symmetry and openness that define the back of the kitchen. “More organized and attractive elements of the pantry were deliberately located near these openings,” Creer says.

Double Islands Double islands add function and flexibility. One is for food prep and hosts a small sink. “It’s very common to have at least two sinks in a kitchen this size,” says contractor Casey Cloward. One of three sinks serves the pantry. The front island is designed for serving and casual dining.

Globe Pendants “Antique brass injects a traditional element while their globe shapes are more modern,” says Creer, describing the four Visual Comfort pendants hanging above the islands.

Shiplap Detail A lowered ceiling delineates the open kitchen area from the adjoining family room and dining areas. Shiplap adds a subtle, charming layer of detail to the overhead surface. “It finishes it off and makes it look special,” Creer explains.

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KITCHEN DESIGN

1

Why This Kitchen Cooks

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Design-savvy details and smart storage solutions deliver function and flair to the active space.

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OPEN SHELVES

Open shelves flank a window above the farmhouse sink, adding open storage that is easily accessed. Everyday dishes and serving pieces double as decorative accessories that charm the space.

2

SINK WALL

Located on a window wall overlooking the pool and patios, the clean-up zone features a porcelain farmhouse sink, quartz countertops, a brick wall, open shelves and black window frames. “They nod to the traditional,” Creer explains.

3

RANGE HOOD Extending from a painted brick wall, the stainless steel range hood boasts simple panel and rivet details. X-mullioned glass doors detail flanking cabinets with timeless furniture styling.

4

CABINET BASES

Calacatta marble tops contrasting painted and natural, rift-sawn white oak cabinets adorned with polished nickel door handles and bin-style drawer pulls. European white oak floors foster the room’s traditional farmhouse feel and join white walls to provide a neutral backdrop for the room’s subtle yet compelling details.

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anchored by a large prep island positioned in front of the range. A wall of integrated refrigeration and built-in open shelving flanks the island at one end, and on the opposite end, a window wall features a clean-up zone replete with a deep farmhouse sink and open shelves. “Our client specifically requested that the main sink had a window above so that she could watch the action in the backyard,” Cloward says. The second is-

inevitably end up in the kitchen, the design allows plenty of floor space for socializing, food prep and clean up. No traffic jams here. A large pantry lives behind the main kitchen space and opens at both ends. As beautifully designed as the kitchen, it features a second refrigerator, third sink and loads of counter-

land delineates the kitchen from the nearby family room and offers seating for casual dining and entertaining. Because guests

top and storage space. “It’s a hybrid between food storage and a finished butler’s pantry,” says Creer, who champions the separation of kitchen spaces. “Too much real estate makes a kitchen feel like a restaurant. If you break it up, it feels more intimate and homey.”


In the pantry, glass-front bin drawers add transparency and style to a bank of natural oak cabinets. The upper cabinets and open shelves are painted white to maintain design continuity with the main kitchen area and to keep the pantry light and bright. Woven baskets conceal their contents, transparent storage containers become organized art and tiered-shelf organizers aid visibility of items, even those deep in back.

Materials “We used a lot of white, black and wood as the jumping off point for the design that runs throughout the house,” says Creer. For the kitchen's countertops, she paired thick Calacatta marble with Metropolis black quartz. “It’s a great cheat that resembles natural soapstone but is super durable and stain resistant,” she explains. She also teamed white-painted and natural whiteoak cabinets with polished nickel hardware and antique brass light fixtures. “I like to mix and match materials so the space doesn’t look one note.” Creer chose stainless steel for the clean-lined range hood and dressed it with simple panel and rivet details. “It’s a timeless material that’s not too fussy or formal,” she says. Shiplap clads the ceiling while oak floors and white walls provide a warm and neutral backdrop that fosters the simple, timeless look.

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The kitchen may be new, but it doesn’t look or feel like it. White-painted brick delivers texture and authenticity to numerous walls while hand-painted terra cotta tile backs open shelves, adding subtle pattern to the space. “We wanted nuances of Belgian style so the house isn’t too modern or farmhousey,” Creer explains. The shaker-style cabinets boast a clean-lined modern look, but handsome crown molding and four classic glass doors with X-mullions give them a more traditional bend. For open shelves, Creer passed on showy accessories, choosing instead glazed pottery, cookbooks and everyday dishes for display. “They’re not dust collectors,” she says. “They’re functional items that add to the kitchen’s casual, livable style.” Woven barstools, wicker baskets and wood cutting boards do the same, while introducing comforting natural materials and textures. Cloward explains, “This kitchen has a lot of detail, but it reads simple and that’s its success.”

CTOP1821

PHOTO (PORTRAIT) LINDSAY SALAZAR

Details

DINING ISLAND

Too much real estate makes a kitchen feel like a restaurant. If you break it up, it feels more intimate and homey.” —Caitlin Creer

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bedrockquartz.com 801-282-3322 WEST JORDAN 5996 Dannon Way

LAYTON

2710 N 350 W

PLEASANT GROVE 513 W 700 S

ST. GEORGE

270 E Riverside Dr, Ste 2


SPECIAL ADVERTISING SECTION

ST YLEMAKERS

PHOTO REBEKAH WESTOVER

BY NATALIE TAYLOR

Looking for new ideas and solutions for creating the perfect abode? In this special section, we’ve asked some of Utah’s most talented design pros, skilled craftsmen and innovative retailers for their design secrets, fresh forecasts and more. From inspiration for refurbishing a vintage camper to refreshing a room; unique places to shop to tips for remodeling your home, you’ll love the expertise and insight we’ve gathered here.

A palette of emerald and black enriches the chic décor of a Highland Home. Design by Stephanie Holdaway, Gatehouse No. 1.


SPECIAL ADVERTISING SECTION

BARTILE BARTILE IS A local, family-owned business that’s been perfecting the art of premium roof tiles for the past 76 years. Incombustible, Bartile roof tiles far surpass a class-A fire rating and have a 75-year warranty. Some styles even have a class-4 hail rating. “We can create a shake or slate tile that looks like the real thing but will last more than 75 years without the fire hazard or maintenance issues,” says Nick Evans, general manager. 7 2 5 N. 1 000 Wes t, Ce nt e rv i l l e 8 0 1 - 2 9 5- 3443 b a r t i l e .co m

“With our gable options, designers and homeowners can create a true shake or slate roof at a fraction of the price.” In addition to manufacturing the tiles, they also provide expert installation services in northern Utah. “ Workmanship on a tile roof is key to its durability,” says Evans. “So we offer a warranty on tile as well as the installation. We go one step further to make sure we get it right the first time.”

“We create tile roofs based on each customer’s specific design aesthetics. This unparalleled level of customization means we’re always innovating.” NICK EVANS / GENERAL MANAGER

Ask the Expert WHAT’S AHEAD? Crisp gray and black roofs with clean lines that provide the perfect accent for modern and contemporary architecture. We have a rich, jet-black concrete tile that designers are clamoring for.

EXCITED ABOUT? New tile designs and colors that create a wood shake shingle look with gable detail. These tiles look like cedar but will last three times as long and cost half as much.

FRESH IDEAS? We have more than 700 custom colors, designs and textures, so we can literally create anything. Designers from across the nation come to us when they want a dream roof. Channeling limitless imagination helps us stay fresh and current.


SPECIAL ADVERTISING SECTION

CAMPER REPARADISE CELEBRATE LIFE OUTSIDE and off the beaten path. Camper Reparadise is an award-winning restoration and customization shop specializing in high-end design of everything from vintage Airstreams to modern Sprinter vans; it’s an intimate operation uniquely equipped to produce exclusive mobile spaces. Owner Brandon Zinninger and his crew of engineers, designers and fabricators come from humble origins. “We set up shop in an old 7-Up bottling warehouse seven years ago with one trail-

er to work on and a truck full of tools,” he says. Today, Camper Reparadise is a full-service company with 14 industry experts offering body work, finish carpentry, hi-fi audio systems and even upfitting for tow vehicles. “We establish a mutually trusting relationship with our clients, understand their goals, and work hard to turn their ideas into cohesive, functional works of art,” Zinninger says. View their portfolio of concession, lifestyle, and adventure builds at camperreparadise.com BRANDON ZINNINGER / OWNER

2 3 8 2 S. Redwood R oa d , S a l t La ke Ci t y 8 0 1 -9 72- 5211 cam p er epar adis e.c om

“Never skimp on quality workmanship. Don’t be afraid to do something completely out of the box.”

Ask the Expert WHAT’S AHEAD? We are seeing a growing trend in the commercial world as businesses realize the value of using a mobile and visually appealing van or vintage trailer to showcase a lifestyle or product.

EXCITED ABOUT? The entire RV industry has invested the last few years into off-grid living, allowing for more freedom to explore sustainably. We love thoughtful, client-based design that supports alternative ways to live or travel.

FRESH IDEAS? No project or day at Camper Reparadise is the same. As a true customization shop, we thrive when presented with a challenging concept that pushes us to problem-solve, innovate and evolve.


SPECIAL ADVERTISING SECTION

D ETAI L S C O MF ORTS FO R T HE H OM E IT’S THE SEASON to be cozy and no one knows how to make your abode cozier than the designers at Details Comforts for the Home. Whether you’re looking for full interior design services or just want a few new accessories to update your space, this charming shop is filled with vintage treasures, high-quality furniture and bedding that will stand the test of time. “We’re known for our large selection of fine bed and bath linens,” owner Rebecca Hatch says. “We’ll ask you for your preference in sheets: Do you like percale, sateen, or linen? Do you sleep warm or cold? Do you like firm or soft pillows? These questions help us create your perfect bed.” Details Comforts for the Home have bed linens from the most exclusive lines at varying price points. Wrap yourself in lush towels and accessorize with bath rugs that add a touch of serenity to your most private spaces. 6 3 3 3 a n d 6 273 S. H ighl a nd D ri v e , H o l l a d ay 8 0 1 -3 64- 8963 d et ai l s co mf or ts .com

REBECCA HATCH / OWNER

“We love using art that evokes joy, peace and comfort in every space. I don’t think a home is finished until there is art on the walls that adds a personal touch. I also love mixing the old with the new.”

Ask the Expert WHAT’S AHEAD? After 31 years, 19 of them in Sugarhouse, we moved to our new locations at 6333 S. Highland Dr. and 6273 S. Highland Dr. (for bedding and bath) to give our clients easier access. We’re always changing and adding new inventory, new lines, more vintage one-of-a-kind items.

EXCITED ABOUT? All the textures, colors and patterns in pillows and bedding. Use these sumptuous fabrics to layer and create and environment that restores and rejuvenates.

FRESH IDEAS? Gorgeous color blends. We’re seeing lots of mossy greens and blues as well as touches of rosy hues.


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GATE HOU SE NO.1 FOR GATEHOUSE NO.1 co-owners Stephanie and Doug Holdaway, the motto, “Love how you live,” dictates every interior design project they approach. “We create spaces that beautifully represent our clients’ individual personalities and lifestyles while providing all the comfort and functionality they need to live their lives,” Stephanie says. The professional design team works with you every step of the way—from blueprints to finishing touches. They are delighted to help you select accessories, design a new space, customize furniture or even just do a little seasonal sprucing. “Our in-house design center has everything you need to get the ball rolling,” Doug says. Since opening in 1979, Gatehouse No.1 has been known as Orem’s preeminent design and decor showroom. “Visit our 10,000-square-foot showroom to see, touch and lounge on your furniture before you make the investment,” Stephanie says. The furniture showroom features hand-selected furniture and accessories based on travel, timeless design and superior craftsmanship. 6 7 2 S. State Street , O re m 8 0 1 - 2 29- 9505 g at eh o u s es tyle.com @g a t eh o u s en o 1

STEPHANIE HOLDAWAY / CO-OWNER AND DIRECTOR OF DESIGN

“Stay true to you.We love working to express each individual’s personal style through beautiful design.”

Ask the Expert WHAT’S AHEAD? Over the past 25 years we’ve been in business, we’ve continually evolved in response to trends while maintaining a timeless, classic aesthetic. As we expand our design services and products, we look forward to continued growth in our community.

EXCITED ABOUT? All the diverse design trends. Our two personal favorites include East Coast traditional and relaxed modernism. The broad range of emerging styles allows for endless possibilities. Our talented design team offers a wide stylistic scope to ensure each project is tailored to each client.

FRESH IDEAS? To keep things fresh, be flexible with your design and make small updates regularly. Not all changes need to be big or dramatic; use a neutral base that allows for an easy refresh with accents like pillows, rugs and accessories.


SPECIAL ADVERTISING SECTION

INSIDE OUT ARCHITECTURALS THIS IS NO ORDINARY SHOWROOM. Inside Out Architecturals is the ultimate art tile destination in Utah. From wood parquet to glass, custom mosaic to historical ornamental, its lines are sourced from more than 50 different global manufacturers. Owner Leah Wynn—with team Anna Ayala, Sarah Pennington Booher, Sue Lindquist and Swarnali Satpathy—gather exemplary artisan lines to help clients recreate authentic designs. The showroom is loaded with the latest trends and colors. “Blues are hot this year,” Wynn says. “From deep dark, glossy, sexy cerulean to white with a hint of sapphire.” Want to create a hip look? Try mixing beatup, gnarly, old tiles with new sleek, modern ones. Imperfect, undulating hand-rolled surfaces, moody glazes and molded details you remember from your grandma’s bath, you’ll find them in our showroom,” Wynn says. 3 4 1 0 S. 300 Wes t, S a l t La ke Ci t y 8 0 1 - 4 87- 3274 i ns i d e ou tar ch itectu r a l s.c om

LEAH WYNN / OWNER

New Ravenna Monaco Floral, a waterjet mosaic. Shown in honed and polished Nero Marquina.

“It’s good to be square. Try offsetting one, you might like it. It’s fun to be a little off sometimes. I love square tiles installed in the same space in different directional patterns.”

Ask the Expert WHAT’S AHEAD? As we grow, we're working with more local artisans to offer their pottery, glass and metal wares to our clients. We are so excited about all the talent and possibilities we're finding.

EXCITED ABOUT? The resurgence of art deco with its precise and boldly delineated geometric shapes and strong colors. Elegant hues with classy shapes are bringing glam back to wall spaces, flooring and focal points.

FRESH IDEAS?

Original Style Mosaic Taupo Stripe GW-TPOMOS on the wall with Grisaille on the floor.

Soft silky matte glazes can be found in all sizes, shapes and colors. Mixing these with texture or glossy tile helps gives surfaces extra depth and dimension.


SPECIAL ADVERTISING SECTION

K . RO C K E D ESIG N DESIGNING LIVABLE, ARTISTIC spaces that create a comfortable context for people as their lives evolve is a passion for acclaimed designer Kristin Rocke, owner of K. Rocke Interior Design. For the past 15 years, this Utah-based interior design firm has been completing uniquely designed and influential interiors coast-to-coast and across the globe. With an extensive and award-winning list of projects, Rocke has been listed as one of the “Top 10” by Traditional Home and featured in various distinguished publications. The firm’s impressive portfolio includes resorts, restaurants, retail shops and residences. “My clients trust me to push the envelope and take them somewhere unexpected, knowing that each project ultimately represents their individuality,” Rocke explains. Rocke, an NCIDQ Interior Designer, also owns Glass House, a pulsating design store furnished with unique items that delight shoppers and elevate the style of their homes. Visit social @glasshouseslc and krockedesign.com 3 9 1 0 E . H ig h lan d Dri v e , Mi l l c re e k 8 0 1 - 2 74- 2720 k r o ckedes ig n .co m

KRISTIN ROCKE / PRINCIPAL AND OWNER

“We can dream it, develop it, draw it and get it built.”

Ask the Expert WHAT’S AHEAD? I’ve been having so much fun with patterns, particularly trapezoidal shapes in stone. The American furniture market is finally embracing European shapes, so we get the best of both worlds: high design plus comfort.

EXCITED ABOUT? I love innovating kitchens by breaking up island surfaces, designing new custom profiles and outfitting them like couture for the home. We can dream it, develop it, draw it and get it built—from the smallest details to the largest— including one-off custom flooring, fabrics and wall coverings.

FRESH IDEAS? I keep it fresh by traveling a lot, listening to clients and staying inspired by what I see around me. It’s such an exciting time to be in design. There is so much available and so many opportunities to bring creative visions into being.


SPECIAL ADVERTISING SECTION

L E I SU R E L I V ING AN OUTDOOR LIVING SPACE is one of the top must-haves for any home. “When designing an outdoor space, the first thing to consider is how you want to use it,” says Michelle McDonald-Ross, buyer. “For entertaining, for relaxing in your personal sanctuary, or for playing together as a family?” The second thing to consider is your vibe. Do you like vibrant colors and energetic patterns or serene and sophisticated neutrals? Ultimately, the activities and ambience you desire for your out-

door space should dictate what furniture will work best for your personal lifestyle,” she says. Leisure Living offers the largest selection and in-stock availability of outdoor furniture in the Mountain West. All inventory is available for immediate, courtesy delivery. “We pride ourselves in sourcing the best quality products made with premium raw materials and skilled craftsmanship,” says McDonald-Ross. “We provide furniture that stands up to the elements and everyday living, at trustworthy prices.”

“We use technology and warehousing processes that help us handle the evergrowing demand for outdoor furnishings.” MICHELLE MCDONALD-ROSS / BUYER

Ask the Expert WHAT’S AHEAD? Outdoor fabrics are continuing to evolve. Now we have an array of textures including chenille, velvet, tweed, terry cloth and faux leather. Intricate blends of multiplethread colors create interesting, dynamic colors. Outdoor fabrics' functionality, forgiveness and fashion-forward appearances lend ease and style to modern living.

EXCITED ABOUT? Synthetic but natural-looking rope details. This fresh take on the wicker trend adds to the mixed-media style and eclecticism that is extremely popular in homes right now.

FRESH IDEAS? Accessories. In an outdoor space that means pillows, throws, planters and plants, rugs and dishware. Use an unusual color palette or color combination to update the space with a lively pop. Sometimes it’s adding a layer and sometimes it’s simplifying—its an ebb and flow.

2 2 0 8 S. 9 0 0 E as t , Sug a rho u s e 801-487-3289 l e i sure l i v i n g i n c.co m


SPECIAL ADVERTISING SECTION

O.C. TANNER JEWELERS VISIT O.C. TANNER Jeweler’s Home & Lifestyle department for truly unique home décor and accessories. If you’re looking for the perfect gift to celebrate special occasions, the third-floor department brims with treasures for weddings, successes and holidays. Highly curated, the department always has new offerings from well-known and recently discovered designers and artisans. “We attend several markets a year to find the perfect items,” says Bob Martin, Home & Lifestyle buyer. “We place a premium on exclusivity and have personal

relationships with many of our partners.” O.C. Tanner is the exclusive retailer in Utah for Terrafirma Ceramics, a working pottery studio in New York City that designs and produces handmade pottery, dinnerware and table settings. Artist Ellen Evans starts with unique shapes and natural stoneware. She then creates patterns by painting liquid porcelain through textiles and lace. The warm tones juxtaposed with vibrantly colored and patterned porcelain surfaces creates a casual yet sophisticated look.

“Don’t be afraid to mix it up. For example, pair an expensive vase with casual dinner plates. Blend patterns, textures and colors. The balance of yin and yang makes people comfortable.” BOB MARTIN / HOME & LIFESTYLE BUYER

Ask the Expert WHAT’S AHEAD? People want artistic objects that can be used every day. When you invite someone into your home, it creates a real sense of warmth and hospitality. Creating a striking table setting and presenting food in a beautiful way is effortless with attractive and approachable pieces that can be dressed up or down.

EXCITED ABOUT? Montes Doggett crafts an exquisite collection of tabletop ceramics and pottery that are durable, yet elegant. Each piece is handcrafted by Peruvian artisans who interpret traditional shapes in new ways, creating endless possibilities and combinations.

FRESH IDEAS? Use the new neutral: mocha. We’re loving a fresh color palette that evokes the season by complementing rich brown with chestnut, charcoal and black. It’s really quite stunning.

1 5 S. S t at e S t reet , Sa l t Lak e Ci t y 8 0 1 - 5 32 - 3 2 2 2 o c ta nne r j ew el er s .co m


SPECIAL ADVERTISING SECTION

SH E AR E R D E SIG NS WANT TO CREATE a stylish, affordable and inviting space that works with your lifestyle? Shearer Designs can help you create a room or home that will be satisfying for years to come. “My father was from the old school of designing, drafting and building custom homes from start to finish,” says Lisa Shearer, owner. “I’ve always had a passion for designing spaces, so that background gives me a better perspective of the whole home structurally, mechanically and spatially.” 6 3 0 0 N . Sagewood Dri v e , S ui t e H105, P a r k City 4 3 5 - 9 0 1- 1186 sh ear er des ig n s .co m

Shearer teams with contractor Arden Jensen, owner of Red Diamond Construction, for building needs, and staging coordinator Alexandra Alexander, owner of Alex Avenue Photography, to help people who want to sell their homes. Whether you are remodeling and need a simple design plan for a single room or building a new home, these experts are ready to help with projects in any phase and any budget. “I help clients make the best decisions based on construction, quality, cost and design,” she says.

LISA SHEARER / OWNER

“I always incorporate a signature hood into my kitchen designs. I love the wow factor it creates when you walk into the room.”

Ask the Expert WHAT’S AHEAD? The wide variety of tile options. They're making statements in all of my projects right now -- from beautiful wavy tiles on a modern fireplace surround to linen porcelain tiles on a bathroom floor, which adds the right amount of texture and warmth.

EXCITED ABOUT? The new luxury vinyl plank flooring products that are so good that it's hard to tell they're not real hardwood. They've come so far in how they hold up to daily wear and tear. Combined with the ease of installation and affordability, they're some of the most innovative options available.

FRESH IDEAS? I love the saying “less is more.” The key to keeping it fresh is to eliminate items from your home you no longer use or even enjoy. This instantly calms the mind and refreshes the space.


SPECIAL ADVERTISING SECTION

THE STO NE CO L L E C T I ON NO MATTER WHAT your design aesthetic is, the grandeur of natural stone can paint it into reality. Its variations in color, pattern and texture lead to unlimited potential. And because it comes from the earth, it’s a sustainable investment that stands the test of time. If you want to add the luxury of natural or engineered stone in your home, The Stone Collection offers one of the broadest inventories available with more than 8,000 slabs from more than 30 countries. 2 1 7 9 S. C o mmerce Ce nt e r D ri v e , S ui t e 5 00, Wes t Va l l e y Ci t y 8 0 1 - 8 75- 4460 t hes ton ecollection .c om

The Stone Collection is Salt Lake City’s largest natural and engineered stone slab resource offering granite, marble, quartzite, semi-precious, engineered quartz, soapstone and more in a variety of price points. All of the premium hard surface materials in the 60,000-square-foot showroom and warehouse are hand selected. In addition to natural stone, The Stone Collection carries Neolith, Caesarstone, Geoluxe, Vetrazzo and more, including Diresco, a new exterior-use quartz product that has just arrived.

Mike Hitchcock

MIKE HITCHCOCK / MANAGING DIRECTOR AND PETE SMITH / GENERAL MANAGER

“Pay heed to trends but don’t lose your inner voice. While it might be fashionable, it’s ultimately got to be a look you love.”

Ask the Expert WHAT’S AHEAD? We're growing and are relocating our flagship headquarters in Denver, Colorado to a larger, state-of-the-art showroom and slab gallery. We also recently acquired Marble of the World, a leading exotic natural stone supplier, to offer even more exceptional, luxurious hard surfaces.

EXCITED ABOUT? The sleek look and minimal maintenance of quartz. We're excited for new colors as well as Caesarstone's concrete finishes that bring organic details to the modern look of quartz. Diresco is high-quality, engineered quartz made in Belgium that can be used indoors and outdoors.

FRESH IDEAS? In 2020, contemporary and modern is still the name of the game, with clean, simplistic details on countertops such as a mitered or eased edge.


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I NC R E D IB L E DW EL L I N G S INCREDIBLE DWELLINGS’ unassuming storefront does not prepare you for what’s within. Located at 380 E. 1700 South, it houses a beautiful collection of home décor accents. What it arguably showcases best is the artistic genius and creative talent of the woman who brought us this local gem. Eleanor Ramirez has always had a flair for aesthetics. Growing up in the Philippines, she originally trained to be a biology professor, but her dream was to create a design studio that blended passion, comfort and style without sacrificing affordability. Fast 3 8 0 E. 1 700 So u th , Sa l t La ke Ci t y 8 0 1 - 6 8 8- 1319 i ncr ed ibledwellin g .com

forward to many years later in 2015 when Incredible Dwellings first opened its doors, and Ramirez has been transforming her clients’ spaces ever since. For Ramirez, a well-designed house has lasting impacts on one’s life. Her fresh approach to design prioritizes her clients’ needs, whether that be functionality, sentimental value or style. “Here at Incredible Dwellings, our passion is to bring out the best in your house,” she says. “To create joy in that space, make your house a truly distinctive home to be lived in and enjoyed.”

ELEANOR GARCIA RAMIREZ / OWNER, LEAD DESIGNER

“We love using unexpected items on walls as an alternative to flat wall art. Something with texture and dimension can make all the difference.”

Ask the Expert WHAT’S AHEAD? We’re constantly improving by researching new products, engaging with clients in a better way, and acquiring updated design technologies to enhance our work flow. Being able to grow and offer online solutions is huge. And as promised, we continue to give back to the community in new and exciting ways.

EXCITED ABOUT? Layering colors. It's always fun to see the way color can enhance a space. Bright accent walls and colorful furniture can give a space so much more personality. And then, make sure to balance those vibrant bursts with unique, organic pieces.

FRESH IDEAS? Repurposing items is a great way to keep it fresh. America’s buying perspective is all about buying new, but I’ve found things in my clients’ garages or attics and given them new life. You never know what treasures you have hiding in your own home.


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HOUSE

warming 10

Reasons Autumn is your Home’s Favorite Season BY BRAD MEE

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Because … velvets feel even more fabulous in the fall. Of course, we crush on velvet year-round, but this season, it seems extra chic. Rich, luxurious and available in endless colors, today’s velvets range from deep pile to crushed, matte to cut textures and printed to interwoven with patterns. Take your pick. What’s more, easy-care varieties make velvet as practical as it is pretty, and a favorite for minimalist and maximalist designs alike. Conway velvets by Zoffany, to the trade from Style Library, stylelibrary.com

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PHOTO COURTESY OF KIANA UNDERWOOD, TULIPINA.COM

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Because … the season’s foliage makes florals even more spectacular. “Autumn’s fruit and foliage create the perfect backdrop to make fall’s key flowers stand out,” says designer Conner Nesbit, owner of Leuca Floral in Logan. For this arrangement, Nesbit chose red pistachio, purple plum and black sage leaves to contrast with a mix of blush-toned ranunculus, dahlias, carnations and zinnias. Japanese anemone and tulips add shots of white while date palm berries, pears and ghost pumpkins nod to the autumn season.

Conner Nesbit, Leuca Floral

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3

… it’s pile-on-the-pattern time. It’s always a heavy moment when you trade in summer’s simplicity for autumn’s complex combos. Go for it. This season, layers are in and more is officially more. Mix daring florals with hybrid tribal patterns, mad plaids and bold graphics. Start by choosing a fearless favorite, then complement it with dissimilar, less-dominant patterns. Use a luscious color to unify them. Rich berry or deep teal, anyone? If you’re feeling a touch timid, save it for spring. Now is the time to be brave.

RADISH SW 6861 SHERWINWILLIAMS

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DE NIMES NO. 299 FARROW & BALL

MANOR GREEN 2047-20 BENJAMIN MOORE

PHOTO SCOT ZIMMERMAN

GO DEEP


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PHOTO REBEKAH WESTOVER

Because … leaves aren’t the only things changing color. You’re considering venturing far from the safety of white walls. Congratulations. Now, let the season inspire your color choice. Something a little darker, a littler richer, a lot more daring. While you’re at it, get to the finish line and go beyond a single accent wall. You don’t want it to look like you ran out of paint, right? Liv Design Collective and Raykon Construction committed to full-on color when they painted this inspiring home office, cocooning it in lush, forest green. Give you any ideas?

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When it comes to kitchenware, the easiest way out of a steel-gray rut is to add a dash of color. Leave it to Le Creuset to give your culinary tools—and your kitchen—a seasonal upgrade. Imagine a casserole served in Flame, sauce spooned from Truffle, a brisket braised in Indigo. Berry, Fig, Persimmon—the palette grows with hues that are as delicious as the cuisine you’ll create in them. lecreuset.com

PHOTO COURTESY LE CREUSET

… your soups should be stylish, too.

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… it makes sense to change your scents.

LEATHER SATCHEL Smoothly rich cured leather, citrusy red mandarin peel, heady vanilla bean, musky rich patchouli, earthy warm amber, smoky sweet myrrh. Tuccasi Ferrun diffuser, $90, Alice Lane Home Collection, SLC

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REDWOOD – DEN Mossy fern, woodsy juniper and bracing mint eucalyptus set the stage for a heaping of clove bud, Virginia cedar and California redwood. Lafco New York candle, $60, Glass House, SLC

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MOROCCAN AMBER Moroccan amber, sweet patchouli, heliotrope and bergamot are accented with a hint of eucalyptus. Nest diffuser and votive candle, $49 and $17, Ward & Child— The Garden Store, SLC

PALO SANTO A sustainably cultivated wood from South America that has natural aromatic properties from the tree resin: rich, musky, sweet, citrus notes mixed with mint and pine. Skeem Large Sticks and Offering Bowl, $34 and $18, O.C. Tanner Jewelers, SLC

PHOTOS ADAM FINKLE (1-3)

See ya, Ocean Breeze and Garden Rose. You’re so last season. Fall calls for fuller-bodied, earthier fragrances that last beyond a single whiff. Any one of these four should do the trick.


7

Because … right about now, you’re probably feeling a chill—and so is your room. Your décor, like your fall wardrobe, needs warming layers. Enter the throw. It’s a decorating essential—as long as it doesn’t look like you nabbed it from the coach cabin on your last flight home. Thin, scratchy and devoid of detail—who wants that? Nobody. Same goes for the monstrosity knitted by your great aunt. Instead, invest in a finequality piece that feels as good as it looks. You’ll thank yourself all season long.

Extra points for vivid color stripes. Alpaca throw, $105, Ward & Child—The Garden Store, SLC

Cheers for chic pom-poms. Baby alpaca throw, $322, Alice Lane Home Collection, SLC

PHOTO ADAM FINKLE

Blanket-edge stitching gives it a cool, handcrafted vibe. Black and white wool throw, $225, Glass House, SLC

When it comes to fringe: the bigger, the better. Alicia Adams alpaca, $560, O.C. Tanner Jewelers, SLC

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Because … it's time to put a ring on it. “People get wreath fever in the fall,” jests Natalie Bernhisel-Robinson, owner of Le Fleur Design and author of Living Wreaths (Gibbs Smith $20). And why not? “There's no better time to forage for materials,” she explains. For this hoop-shaped wreath, the floral designer turned to her yard and nearby hillsides to harvest a wild array of grasses, crabapples, sedum, yarrow, branches, dried hydrangea, sunflower pods, rosemary and sage brush that she paired with black agonis and preserved oak leaves to create a welcoming ring of high-texture and mellow hues. The elements flow in a counterclockwise direction and create shots of eye-catching color. “This keeps the eye moving around the design,” Bernhisel-Robinson says. Her caveat? “Don't choose anything that's fragile or that falls apart easily. You don't want a wreath to shed every time the door swings.” For the date of Bernhisel-Robinson's next wreath-making class, follow her on Instagram, @lafleursaltlake

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… your patio pots are ripe for a reboot. By summer's end your outdoor planters are pooped, but there are still weeks of outdoor living to be savored. Bring them back to life. Simply swap out tired annuals with any number of cool-weather loving plants and your pots will be good to go for another season. Think ornamental cabbage and kale, mums, asters and pansies. Keep in mind that fall doesn't present a growth period, so select large plants and place them close together for an instantly lush look.

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PHOTOS: WREATH COURTESY OF NATALIE BERNHISEL-ROBINSON; PATIO POT, ADAM FINKLE. OPPOSITE PAGE (CLOCKWISE FROM TOP LEFT) 1-3 SCOT ZIMMERMAN; 4 ADAM FINKLE

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Natalie BernhiselRobinson


Don Brady, Don Brady Design, SLC

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Because ‌ fall wouldn’t be fall without pumpkins.

Cara Fox, The Fox Group, SLC

Pumpkins are a simple and stylish way to adorn your home for the entire season, not just on Halloween. Deck out your doorway, perk up the patio or just plant the showy gourds around the house. You decide. Now, go to the patch and get picking.

Matt Dickamore, Denton House, SLC

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A PERFECT

fit

Inspired by its tiny lot, a pint-sized Avenues home takes on big living and style, thanks to the deft design of architect Dallas Davis. BY BRAD MEE

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PHOTOS BY SCOT ZIMMERMAN


In the tree-shaded Avenues neighborhood, architect Dallas Davis’ new two-bedroom house has a footprint of only 720 squarefeet. Davis designed the home and hired contractor Brian Brassey to frame and build it to 50-percent completion. Dallas and his father Brent Davis teamed up to complete the project’s construction with help from family and friends. OPPOSITE: A wall of windows composes the home’s entry and floods light into the main living space measuring a modest 16-feet wide and 24-feet deep. A family friend constructed the fireplace with brick salvaged from an 1860s building and the sidewalk of homeowner Dallas Davis’ childhood home.

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Architect Dallas Davis relaxes on his front steps.

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If ever there were a home’s design driven by its site, this is it. The city lot, measuring a mere 33-feet wide and 82-feet long, is sandwiched between two elegant old homes in Salt Lake’s Avenues neighborhood. For a century, ordinances deemed the land unbuildable, so it languished weed-covered and vacant. In 2016, new zoning permitted a residence to be added to the sliver of land, but there was a catch: the structure’s footprint could consume no more that 40 percent of the property. The gauntlet had been thrown down, and architect Dallas Davis quickly picked it up. He purchased the land and created his new home with a footprint measuring only 720 square feet. A basement adds 430 more square feet of living space below. Admittedly, Davis is not a disciple of tiny home living. “The house is small because it had to be,” he explains. Davis works with Elliott Workgroup in Park City and is accustomed to dealing with cramped properties and difficult zoning restrictions. He and his team have remodeled many big-money, tiny-rooms miners’ cottages located around historic Main Street. “I’ve had to think through a lot of spatial challenges over the years,” he says.

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The open living, dining and kitchen areas occupy the main part of the home. The peaked ceiling reaches 16 feet high and delivers a sense of space that belies the interior’s small dimensions. The white walls and ceiling, as well as refined finishes and carefully chosen furnishings foster the home’s spacious feel. Davis painted the inside of the new Sierra-Pacific wood windows a shade of black to replicate steel sash versions.

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MASTER BEDROOM

MASTER BATH CLOSET

ABOVE: In the galley kitchen, light streams through a side window across shiny Neolith countertops from The Stone Collection and custom laminate cabinets built by Davis’ father Brent, owner of Davis Mill and Cabinets. Matte-finished walls accentuate their high-sheen surfaces. “Gloss against matte occurs throughout the house,” Davis says. He doggedly maintained consistent lines that extend from cabinetry, to window moldings and trim work, adhering to the interior’s streamlined, precise design.

STAIRS

CLOSET BEDROOM

KITCHEN

BATH

MAIN LEVEL

LOWER LEVEL MEDIA ROOM/ OFFICE

LIVING ROOM

STAIRS

FRONT PORCH

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LAUNDRY

DINING

FLOOR PLAN The main level includes an open great room area and steps down in back to a master suite, following the property’s grade. The home’s roofline also drops in back to accommodate existing power lines. A light-filled stairwell leads to a lower level that sits below the front portion of the home and is comprised of a media room and guest suite.


WALL AND CEILINGS INDOORS AND OUT

WINDOWS, DOORS AND LOWER LEVEL WALLS

FRONT DOOR

MASTER BEDROOM AND BATH ACCENT WALLS

SNOWBOUND SW 7004 Sherwin-Williams

BLACK MAGIC SW 6991 Sherwin-Williams

LEMON LEAF Custom Color by Dallas Davis

GRANITE PEAK SW 6250 Sherwin-Williams

The master bedroom occupies the back of the home and enjoys views of the small, tree-shaded yard. Davis painted the the main wall Sherwin Williams’ Granite Peak to foster a cozy feel and to accentuate the art and upholstered headboard.

Size wasn’t the only thing that impacted Davis’ design. Style was also key. While the modern-leaning architect doesn’t favor traditional style, he knew that this house should. “I wanted to make the home as modern as possible while respecting the neighborhood,” says Davis, who looked to surrounding period homes for inspiration and ideas. Their peaked rooflines, covered porches and clapboard siding all affected his design. The architect embraced these and other traditional elements, but he gave many a fresh spin. Yes, there are gables on his new home, but they don’t overhang. “They’re completely pared back,” Davis explains. So too are the simple columns framing its uniquely broad front porch. The front door welcomes guests, but unlike the neighbors’ doors, it is glass, asymmetrically positioned and surrounded by

windows with square panes. “I didn’t want this to just look like an old house that has been remodeled,” he says. No problem there. Inside, luminous, uplifting light defines and visually expands the interior. A palette of wire-brushed European white oak floors, white high-gloss laminate cabinets, shiny Neolith countertops and pale gray textiles reflect his strict adherence to limited colors and materials that unify interior spaces and makes them feel spacious, graceful and at ease. Davis painted the walls and ceiling the same shade of white as the exterior and painted the wood windows a contrasting espresso color that matches their exterior cladding. Brick salvaged from the sidewalk of Davis’ childhood home forms the fireplace, also painted white. “I love white and how shadows play off of it,” he says. Davis breaks

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from white in the master suite, where a dark navy wall backs art and an upholstered headboard. In the lower level’s media room and guest suite, he dramatically included black walls and accents to create a “chic, urban hotel look.” Throughout the interior, space-savvy details win out. A built-in coat closet and pantry frame an inset window seat that serves the dining table and prevents it from intruding far into the narrow, 16-foot-wide room. The bench contains and conceals ductwork that would have otherwise dropped from the basement ceiling below, impeding on its space. Cabinets shape an efficient galley kitchen and provide required storage as do built-ins throughout the interior. “I’m limited on space, so I have to think about every little detail and where everything goes,” says Davis. “You can’t waste room in a home this size.” Low-profile furnishings allow light and sight lines to flow uninterrupted while providing a comfortable place to relax and entertain friends and family. “It’s really fun living here,” Davis says. “It’s not the most groundbreaking thing you ever saw, but it fits. It’s modern, but it does it subtly. It draws from the neighborhood. And for me, it’s the perfect size.” In no small way, the owner and his new house are happily at home in the Avenues.

WHAT’S THE BIG IDEA? [1] For the brick fireplace built by a family friend, Davis designed a contemporary surround crafted by his father. Its clean lines contrast with the rustic, painted brick behind it. “That’s very deliberate,” says Davis, who used varied textures and forms to elicit interest from white surfaces that dominate the décor. [2] Davis floated the master bathroom’s underlit vanity to create the illusion of more space in the confined area. He repeated the bedroom’s Sherwin Williams’ Granite Peak paint on the bathroom wall to link the two rooms. [3] “This house is so simple that its windows and the doors had to be special,” Davis says. The front entry, described by the homeowner as more like a store front, features a green, asymmetrically positioned door that offsets the more balanced elements that define the front of the home. “It’s a modern take on a traditional entry,” he explains. [4] David paired Sherwin Williams’ Snowbound and Black Magic to create a bold, chic palette for the basement’s media room and guest suite. The pairing visually animates and expands the space. [5] The barley fields surrounding Davis’ childhood home in Genola, Utah inspired a watercolor he painted years ago. To draw the eye through the interior, Davis divided the piece into thirds to serve as the backdrop for a trio of new, housethemed canvases injecting shades of spring green and tranquil blue into the open living, kitchen and dining areas. A glass-topped dining table pulls up to an inset window seat that cleverly contains and conceals ductwork.

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1 4


2 5

3


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Homes

A charming mudroom opens to a Holladay home’s lush gardens and sprawling lawns, page 84.

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“We wanted the back of the house to be as beautiful as the front,� say the owners of the new family home designed by Barnes Vanze Architects and built by Biltmore Construction in Holladay. Mature trees shade the 1.7-acre property. Landscape by Kaiser Trabue Landscape Architecture and Heidi Brewer of Empress Garden Design.

In Holladay, traditional and modern find common ground in a beautiful family home. BY BRAD MEE

PHOTOS BY DEREK ISRAELSEN

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Calming symmetry and timeless details honor the home’s traditional architecture in the main living room. Shots of blue tones link the space to others in the home, as does a curated mix of classic and contemporary forms and finishes. Draperies feature C & C Milano fabric; custom sofas covered in linen by Lee Jofa. LEFT: The spacious entry welcomes guests with an open, two-story staircase backed on one side by handsomely paneled walls and large windows that frame views of Mt. Olympus. The custom rug and stair runner are from Regency Royale.

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When guests arrive at this home in Holladay, they’re greeted by stone-pillared gates, manicured gardens and stately architecture that exemplifies symmetry with a capital S. The impression of time-honored formality and upper-crust propriety prevails. But as visitors step inside the front door and move deeper into the home, the exalted effect of the facade’s grandness all but disappears. Ties loosen and postures ease as the design moves from graciously formal up front to comfortably familiar farther back. That’s exactly as the owners and the talented team that designed, built and decorated the home intended. Sunlight streams through the painted banisters of the entry’s open, two-story staircase, filling the traditional space with glorious light. The paneled walls are white, the oak floors are dark and the look is fresh and welcoming. Elegant, yes. But fussy? Not here. Not for this family. “This is not a showpiece; it’s a house that is used and enjoyed,” says interior designer Catherine Goodsell, who worked closely with the homeowners

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to create a timeless family home that caters to their active lives and easygoing style. Naturally, oversized blue flowers bloom profusely on the walls in the nearby dining room. “Anyone who knows my client gets this bold and playful choice,” says Goodsell of the Phillip Jeffries wallpaper. “This is so her.” Not only did the surprising choice reflect the homeowner’s fun-loving style, but it also drove the palette for the rest of the home, where a thread of blue moves throughout. For proof, one only needs to look across the entry into the formal living room. There, inky-blue pillows and boldly patterned armchairs animate the room’s neutral palette

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and strict symmetry. Even the white draperies are edged in navy. “It prevents the panels from disappearing into the walls,” says Goodsell, who painted the walls of the more formal spaces white and tinted the others slightly darker for a more casual vibe. The living room is dressy, but it’s also inviting—a must for the homeowners. They also desired beautiful crown moldings, coffered ceilings and lots of light. This space checks all three from the wish list. It also showcases the interior’s compelling pairings of contemporary and antique furnishings, assorted metals and woods, straight and elegantly curved lines and smooth and richly textured fabrics. “It’s an eclectic, personalized mix that


LEFT: Phillip Jeffries grasscloth wallpaper dresses the dining room walls with an oversized abstract floral pattern. A custom selenite chandelier by Ron Dier Design and drapery fabric by Donghia add to the space’s luxe, layered décor. ABOVE: “We wanted to create interiors that complement the scale and beauty of the home, yet still feel comfortable and approachable,” says Catherine Goodsell, principal of Catherine Goodsell Interiors. To that end, she treated the ceiling of the breakfast room with beams and shiplap to create the look of an enclosed porch, hung a bronze lantern-style light by Visual Comfort and covered the hostess chairs with easy-care Perennials fabric. RIGHT: The family room is a comfortable extension of the kitchen and a favorite hangout for the family. Goodsell designed the painted fireplace and included furnishings and fixtures that foster a relaxed, kickyour-shoes-off vibe including wood-framed mirrors, a rustically finished armoire, a bronze Urban Electric chandelier and leather swivel chairs by Lee.

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A charming reading nook offers a cozy spot to relax in the upstairs hallway. “Large houses need intimate moments like this,” says Goodsell. The pillow collection features fabrics by Kelly Wearstler, Rose Tarlow and Ebanista. OPPOSITE TOP LEFT: Goodsell used a custom upholstered bed, a Marc Phillips rug and color-blocked draperies made from C & C Milano fabrics to inject tranquil shades of blue into the master bedroom space. OPPOSITE TOP RIGHT: Catherine Goodsell, principal of Catherine Goodsell Interiors OPPOSITE BOTTOM: The owners’ affinity for intriguing patterns, rich textures and tones of blue comes through in a charming sitting area overlooking tailored gardens. Goodsell paired a Janus et Cie sofa with custom chairs dressed with heavy fringe and Lee Jofa fabric.

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Located just steps from a treeshaded stream, the guest suite features a more contemporary, mountainy dÊcor than the rest of the home, Goodsell explains. She designed the wood-framed modern fireplace and furnished the sitting area with handsome Noir cabinets and plaid wing chairs from Lee Industries. RIGHT: A canopy bed by RH fills the volume of the guest suite, but its open frame allows views of the wooded property to flow through unobstructed. Artist Jean Schmidt’s Continental Divide hangs above the bed.

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delivers interest and depth throughout the home,” Goodsell explains. The symmetry and elegance that defines the more formal entry and front rooms give way to more relaxed design and details farther back. In the kitchen, for instance, Walker Zanger terra cotta tile and Circa metal-shaded pendants inject pattern and warmth. Across the room, walls of windows and a ceiling dressed with beams and shiplap give the breakfast space the look and feel of a charming, enclosed porch. “It makes it more cozy,” she says. In the adjoining family room, the designer displayed a gallery’s worth of framed mirrors above a nubby-upholstered sofa and furthered the “earthiness” with a rustic carved armoire and bronze-and-opaque glass chandelier. Slightly darker walls, reduced trim and at-ease furnishings help give all three spaces a more casual, come-as-you-are look and feel. “This is one of our family’s favorite gathering spaces,” the client says. Not that there is a shortage of comfortable spots for family and friends to hang out. “Our architects goodnaturedly laughed at the number of family room spaces we wanted,” says the homeowner, referencing the basement TV room, a sunroom, an above-thegarage playroom and handsomely furnished patios, to name a few. “We’ve often had the kids and their friends in all of these spaces at once,” she adds. The more private spaces live upstairs. The owners wanted the master bedroom—a tranquil, pale blue retreat that opens to a view-laden upper patio—to be

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on the same level as the children’s ensuite bedrooms. The exception to second-story bedrooms is a guest suite that sits a stone’s toss from the stream at the back of the wooded property. “We wanted the guest room to be on the main level for privacy, and also wanted the option for my husband and me to move down to the main floor some day if we decided to,” the homeowner says. The guest suite’s wooded site inspired a modern-mountain décor defined by warm

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woods, dark beams, contemporary forms, luxe leather as well as plaid and textured textiles. A handsome canopy bed completes the chic retreat. “We joke that we’re going to take a vacation to our guest room because we love it, especially with its back porch located right next to the stream,” she adds. Thanks to the talented creative team that the owners refer to as amazing, the sense of comfort and ease seems to resonate through this and every other space in the house.


ABOVE: Garden views flood the spacious sunroom, where Perennials fabrics cover an outdoor sofa and two chairs by McGuire. Side table by Noir. TOP RIGHT: Unlike the front of the home’s grand facade, the entry to the mudroom welcomes guests with a single door and possesses a comforting, small-scale charm. BOTTOM RIGHT: “With the tall trees on the lot and the neighborhood reminiscent of the East Coast, we wanted a traditional Colonial home,” the homeowner says. She and her husband admired the work of Washington DC architects Barnes Vanze, and hired the firm to design exactly that for them and their active family.

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RANCH house

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A scenic retreat in Wolf Creek Ranch marries the best of rustic chic and clean-lined contemporary styles. BY BRAD MEE

PHOTOS BY LUCY CALL

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In the entry, a floating staircase with open treads and rustic metal-grid panels allows light to flow freely through the space while delivering contemporary flair to the stone-walled area.

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Designer Rion Locke chose chiseled slabs of light-toned Indiana limestone to serve as a mantel and hearth for the great room’s fireplace constructed of Montana Moss stone. He and Richard Miller clad many of the home’s walls in reclaimed barn wood and oriented it horizontally for a more modern look.

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Wolf Creek Ranch, about 25 minutes outside of Park City, is a community of more than 13,000 acres with majestic homes dotting a secluded plateau surrounded by scenic mountains and valleys. It’s not the last place you’d expect to find a mammoth stone fireplace or oak-plank floors inside a home, but when paired with contemporary design elements conjured by Rion Locke and Richard Miller, there are plenty of surprises to go around. “It was a balancing act,” says Locke, co-principal of LMK Interior Design. “Our clients wanted a mountain-cabin feel but they also craved clean lines and simple forms.” The designers teamed with Otto Walker architects and contractors Promark Development and Artistic Builders to give the homeowners their envisioned elements—and much more. The impressive ranch house sits on 167 acres of pristine meadows and wooded hillsides. Inspired by the mountain setting, the team not only mimicked its rugged quality, but also its materials. Montana Moss stone, weathered barn wood and pitched metal roofs team to define the of-theearth exterior. Hints of the home’s modern leanings include slender bronze

Rion Locke and Richard Miller, principals of LMK Interior Design.

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ABOVE: The designers worked with Summit Cabinets’ Travis Hatch to outfit the kitchen with timeless cabinets of knotted walnut. Open shelves float on hand-troweled gesso walls, and tongueand-groove cedar clads the ceiling. Countertop stone from Italia Granite. BOTTOM LEFT: Open shelves extend from a hand-troweled plaster wall. A farmhouse-style sconce and under-shelf lighting illuminate everyday dinnerware and the streamlined Caesarstone countertop below. OPPOSITE: A built-in banquette, an oak-topped table and two rope chairs furnish a cozy breakfast room located off the kitchen.

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A shapely tub performs like a stone sculpture in front of the master bathroom’s large window. Locke and Miller teamed quartzite countertops, walnut cabinets, leather-wrapped hardware and leather-framed round mirrors to enrich the serene, stone-walled room. Travertine limestone lines the floor and intricately tiled shower.

mullions dividing large windows, clean-lined beams crowning the entry and stacked panels of pounded metal uniquely detailing the wooden front door. The edited material mix flows indoors. “The outside matches the inside,” says Locke, referencing the reclaimed barn wood and rough stone that clad and compose interior walls. Outside, the board runs vertically to accentuate the home’s height and stature, but indoors, they orient horizontally. “This looks more current and clean,” Miller says. Here and there, the duo offset walls of stone and wood with hand-troweled gesso for visual relief. European oak spans the floors and tongue-and-groove cedar delivers texture and warmth to many of the lofty ceilings also detailed with clean-lined beams, repeating yet another exterior element. Against this backdrop, Locke and Miller injected contemporary forms and clean-lined details while repeating natural colors, finishes and materials that advanced the home’s mountain-ranch style. In the large entry, for example, Locke designed an eye-catching staircase that appears to float in front of an expansive window and stone walls. Thick open treads of oak climb a steel stairway frame formed with bronzetoned metal posts, open metal grid and wood handrails. The form is unmistakably contemporary, but the finishes are warm, earthy and a touch industrial. No predictable lodge-style here. Hanging from above, three cylindrical lanterns are illuminated with nostalgic Edison bulbs that recur throughout the home. “They’re a nod to the vintage ranch era,” Miller explains. Nearby, the great room is similarly gifted with large windows that frame spectacular views while flooding the room with natural light. Locke designed an enormous, chiseledstone mantel and hearth to complement the vast scale of the stone fireplace wall. “They add heft and help consume some of the room’s volume to make the space more comfortable,” he says. Layered furnishings, featuring a contemporary high-contrast palette of light and dark, do the same. The high-back leather sofa,

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We wanted to reference old and rustic in a new and contemporary way.”

—Rion Locke

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A mix of dark and light fabrics, metals and woods elevates the master bedroom’s engaging style. Here and throughout the house, large windows allow natural light to flood the interior and highlight the natural texture and character of the walls. TOP RIGHT: A round, leather-framed mirror hangs from a polished-nickel anchor on a rugged stone wall. Contemporary sconces of glass and iron furthers the room’s rustic-meetsmodern style. BOTTOM RIGHT: Simple beams break up the gessoed wall and cedarplanked ceiling of a long upstairs hallway. A series of thoughtfully spaced ceiling lights injects rhythm to the passageway.

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for example, is actually two sectional pieces. “It had to be large to suit the space,” Miller explains. Mismatched side tables, cylindrical lamps and open-based tables interject modern forms that foster the space’s fresh, light-filled ambiance. The soaring ceiling that crowns the living and dining areas lowers in the open, professionally equipped kitchen to promote a cozy, comfortable feel. There, Locke and Miller designed knotted walnut cabinetry and detailed it with ranch post crosses repeated on the garage and barn doors. Open shelves and bronze accent lights foster an old-farmhouse look and feel. Nearby, a wood-walled breakfast nook—one of the family’s favorite spaces—features a streamlined banquette, rope chairs and rectangular chandelier. “It’s always important to integrate intimate cozy spots, especially in larger homes,” Miller says. The designers’ mix of modern and rustic, dark and light, smooth and rough infuses the interior at every turn. In this house, opposites attract. Dark woods contrast with light stone. Earthy bronze, leather and iron define unexpected clean-lined forms. Native American patterns pop against waffle weaves and smooth textiles. Rounded mirrors and light fixtures relax squared-off furnishings, translucent glass offsets heavy iron, sleek Caesarstone tops knotted walnut cabinets—the list goes on and on. “In the end, we wanted to reference old and rustic in a new and contemporary way,” Locke explains. With a spectacular ranch-style décor that delights their clients, and that’s exactly what they did.

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A wall of windows fills a main-level hallway with sublime light. Thin, bronze-toned mullions frame the panes of glass to give the windows a contemporary flair. A surprising white-painted table furnishes the entry space beyond. TOP LEFT: Chinking—the addition of an insulating substance placed between a wall’s logs or planks—lends an old-cabin charm to the spacious bunk room. Custom bunks feature double beds below and singles above. Unique metal “steps” stand in for a traditional ladder. BOTTOM LEFT: A guest room’s desk area offers a study of contrasting textures. Rough wood walls, a rusted-metal lamp base and a woven rope chair pair with a streamlined, lighttoned desk and round wall mirror. Natural light accentuates the mixed materials.

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HOME IS

ARTis

On a sprawling ranch in Mount Pleasant, Sam and Diane Stewart weave together family history, Western art and contemporary design to build their dream home on the range. BY TESSA WOOLF

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PHOTOS BY SCOT ZIMMERMAN AND TREVOR MUHLER

PHOTO TREVOR MUHLER

WHERE THE


Homeowners Diane and Sam Stewart teamed up with Gregory Walker and the team at WOW Atelier to build a deeply personal ranch house on the couple’s 1,000 acre property in Mount Pleasant. The large ceramic sculpture is by Jun Kaneko.

T

Those who know Diane Stewart, the founder of Modern West Fine Art in Salt Lake City, describe her as an arbiter of good taste and an advocate for the local arts community. Stewart opened the doors to Modern West—the gallery she started nearly seven years ago—but she’s been a patron of the arts and a collector for many years. “Many of the artists whose works I’ve collected and have good relationships with had no representation in Utah,” she explains. At their urging, she started Modern West to support both established and emerging contemporary western artists. It’s no surprise then, that art was at the forefront of her mind when the time came for her and her husband, Sam, to build a new ranch house on their sprawling, pastoral property in Mount Pleasant, Utah. “I design from the inside out because the art is such an integral part of any home I live in,” she explains. “It’s always a balance between the design of the home and the art.” And this particular home was especially close to the couple’s hearts: Sam’s family has owned the 1,000-acre ranch—complete with 200 head of cattle, a gaggle of guest cabins and a barn—since his birth,

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PHOTO TREVOR MUHLER

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PHOTO SCOT ZIMMERMAN

LEFT: To ensure the new structure blended with the property, the team used corten steel on the roof and log walls with chinking that matched the existing cabins. “At some point the home is going to weather a lot more, and it will look like all the other buildings,” says Gregory Walker of WOW Atelier. ABOVE: The entry doubles as a front gallery when you walk into the home. Some of the art in the home is from artists that Stewart represents at Modern West Fine Art. “I would never represent an artist that I wouldn’t put in my own home,” she explains. The sand paintings are by Charles Henderson and the console tables are by J. Scott Anderson.

and he spent much of his childhood there. So when a flood destroyed the property’s original ranch house, a 130-year-old adobe structure, it was a major blow. “My husband was in mourning,” Stewart says. With time, they decided to rebuild, but it was important that the new home paid homage to the property’s rich history. “We wanted the home to be contemporary, but we didn’t want it to look like a spaceship had landed,” Stewart explains. They also wanted the home to have both public and private spaces, so they could host family gatherings and invite groups to enjoy the on-site art, but still have a quiet space where the couple could retreat. And, of course, the home needed to showcase their impressive art collection. To help bridge the past with the present and bring the couple’s vision to life, Stewart called upon her trusted collaborators at WOW Atelier, a boutique architecture firm and creative studio based in downtown SLC, whom she previously teamed up with to design her Modern West gallery spaces (Stewart recently

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Floor-to-ceiling windows and doors fill the great room with natural light. “The home has beautiful vistas,� Stewart says. The mixed media piece above the bar is by Dolan Geiman from Modern West Fine Art, and the bronze sculpture is by James Fraser.

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PHOTO SCOT ZIMMERMAN

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ABOVE: The doors in the great room open up to the pool and outdoor sitting area, providing a seamless transition from inside to out. The bar provides a convenient place for guests and the grandkids to grab refreshments from the nearby pool. OPPOSITE (CLOCKWISE FROM TOP LEFT): Hickory wood flooring moves up the wall into the kitchen’s wide seating nook. The oil painting is by Jeff Pugh. Walker and his team laid out the entire site to have the sun shine in a perfect line between the split roof and onto the two Jun Kaneko sculptures on July 24th, a special holiday for the Stewart family. “I wanted a large gathering table that was connected to the kitchen,” says Stewart, who loves to cook and entertain. Walker designed an oversized island and fashioned a corten-steel hood above the stove to repeat the home’s rustic roofing material. The 1,000-acre ranch not only hosts the new house, a number of guest cottages and a barn, but also 200 head of cattle.

PHOTO SCOT ZIMMERMAN; OPPOSITE PAGE SCOT ZIMMERMAN (TOP LEFT, BOTTOM RIGHT); TREVOR MUHLER (TOP RIGHT AND BOTTOM LEFT)

moved the gallery from its initial SLC digs on 200 South and 200 East to a hip, new location at 412 South and 700 West). “Diane’s style is impeccable,” says Gregory Walker, one third of the trio behind WOW Atelier, along with Chimso Onwuegbu and Benjamin Wiemeyer. “She knows what she likes, but she’s also a great collaborator—maybe it’s because she works with artists, so she’s used to more fluid conversations. We talked a lot about ideas.” Walker and the team at WOW Atelier approach each of their projects with a bespoke ethos, treating architecture and design like couture, and the ranch house was no exception. “We were obsessed with the idea of the home being perfect for them,” he says. “It can’t just be a beautiful thing—it has to work.” They designed a contemporary structure with a unique split roofline and a clear division between public and private spaces: one section of the home includes the great room, kitchen and dining area, while the bedrooms and an office/sitting room are in a separate section. An outdoor living area and pool create a fluid layout from the inside to the outside. “The home is not large, but it’s meaningfully designed and perfectly accommodates how we want to use it,” says Stewart. To juxtapose the new with the old and as a nod to the property’s past, Walker and his team built the home using the same materials as featured on the existing cabins. “We put corten steel on the roof so it rusted out, and we did log walls with


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chinking exactly the way the original cabin was built that Sam lived in when he was little,” Walker explains. “We didn’t want this to feel like some foreign thing. The materiality was really important.” Inside, art abounds throughout the home. An entryway gallery greets you when you walk through the front door and sets the tone for the collection to come. In the master bedroom, an extra-wide fireplace mantel provides the perfect perch for a large piece by Modern West artist Sheldon Harvey, while in the great room a custom bar area was designed to accommodate a commissioned piece by Modern West artist Dolan Geiman displayed above the bar. Outside, two thoughtfully placed large ceramic statues by Jun Kaneko face eachother below the home’s split roof. For the interiors, Stewart and Walker teamed with designer J. Scott

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ABOVE: In the master bedroom, a wide fireplace provides the perfect perch for a painted wood piece by Sheldon Harvey from Modern West Fine Art. The fireplace wall is accented with custom leather panels by WOW Atelier as a reference to Sam’s cattle living zon the ranch. RIGHT: The master bathroom features two vanities and a large soaking tub. The mixed media piece above the tub is by Jann Haworth from Modern West Fine Art.


PHOTOS SCOT ZIMMERMAN

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PHOTO SCOT ZIMMERMAN

In the private office and sitting room, the team strategically positioned the custom desk so Sam could work while watching the grandkids in the pool. The mixed media piece on the left wall is by Dave Newman from Modern West Fine Art. The oil painting on the far wall is by Doug Snow. Â


PHOTO TREVOR MUHLER

The front of the home opens to flourishing gardens and a swimming pool where the family can hang out and enjoy the ranch’s scenic beauty.

Anderson. “I wanted the design to recede a little bit and the art to be front and center,” says Stewart. “I also wanted it to be textural. We used a lot of Native American textiles, and all of the fabrics have a nice hand to them. We kept it simple and sleek so the art could shine.” Despite owning additional homes in Salt Lake, Palm Springs, Paris and New York, the Stewarts spend a lot of time at the ranch house—including weekends and summer holidays— and they always look forward to it. “This house is about family and we’re very rooted to this part of the state; that is part of the draw,” Stewart explains. “Our grandchildren say it’s their favorite of all of our homes. The art in the house is precious, but the rest of the property is kid heaven; it’s different than city life.” The Stewarts’ grandkids and guests alike can truly roam free on the ranch. It’s the same wide-open, awe-inducing Western landscape that has inspired artists for years, and, with the Stewarts’ influence, it will continue to inspire for years to come.

Homeowners Diane and Sam Stewart

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architecture interiors aerials resorts 1.800.279.2757 scotzimmermanphotography.com


DINING IN & OUT

The sweet

NEW STAPLE It used to be that sweet potatoes showed up just for the holidays. Now, they’re daily fare and we couldn’t be happier. BY M A RY BROW N M ALOU F

PHOTO ADAM FINKLE

D

PHOTOS BY A DA M FI NK LE

During the past few years, sweet potato fries have become a standard option to the usual french fries. And as the sweet tuber has captured the imagination of today’s chefs in all kinds of new ways, diners are surprised to find sweet potatoes everywhere. Always sweet, but not cloyingly so, these spuds are amazingly versatile. You can accentuate the sweet by adding brown sugar, molasses and traditional pie spices, or you can contrast the sweet with chile or hot pepper sauce. You can round them into a savory side by using herbs like thyme and rosemary, or you can roast them with other root vegetables for an unexpectedly sweet bite. The options are endless.

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TATER TALK Sweet potatoes are a part of holiday dinners in all kinds of cultures. Tzimmes, an Ashkenazi Jewish dish, is traditionally served at Rosh Hashanah. Carrots and dried fruits are usually a part of the stew and families have their own variations. In Mexico, candied sweet potatoes—camotes enmielados—are a favorite street snack and in the Yucatan region a special dessert is made with sweetened sweet potatoes and coconut. Fried sweet potato-filled empanadillas are a Spanish Christmas treat. And of course, here in the U.S., we have the controversial sweet potato casserole topped with marshmallows. How did that happen? Well, according to Smithsonian, which celebrated the 100th birthday of the dish in 2017 (sorry about that, Ms. Mallow—we missed the party), a company called Angelus Marshmallows (which also made Cracker Jacks!) introduced commercially made marshmallows in 1907. But America wasn't buying them. The company asked the founder of the Boston Cooking School magazine to come up with recipes that would entice people to buy marshmallows. She used them to make a fluffy, gooey browned topping for sweet potatoes and the rest is history.

TO YOUR HEALTH

Sweet Potatoes Enjoy Super Food Status These spuds not only taste good, they’re good for you. Rich in nutrients including fiber, Vitamins A, B6 and C, copper, potassium and iron, they’re also high in beta carotene, a powerful antioxidant that works to eliminate free radicals in the body.

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FRESH FOUNDATION

Start your favorite quiche with a sweet-potato crust. Ingredients:

Recipe:

• 3 ½ cups shredded sweet potatoes (It’s best to handgrate these on the large side of a box grater or use the grater tool on your food processor.) • 1 egg white • 1 tbsp. flour (use gluten-free if needed) • 2 tsp. extra virgin olive oil • ¾ tsp. kosher salt • ¼ tsp. fresh ground black pepper

Preheat oven to 425 degrees and spray a 9-inch cast iron skillet or other oven proof skillet with cooking oil. Place the shredded sweet potatoes in a bowl of water and toss around to release some of the starch. Drain and place the sweet potatoes in a clean towel and squeeze out any excess liquid. Place the sweet potatoes back in the bowl, add in the egg white, flour, salt and pepper and toss until coated.

The Confusion Ends Here A Sweet Potato is not a Yam There are many reasons sweet potatoes are confused with yams. First, they are both sweet(ish). They look somewhat alike, and of course, sweet potatoes can be orange like yams. But a yam is not a sweet potato, and a sweet potato is not a yam. They’re not even related, though they both come from the New World. Supposedly, the naming confusion arose in

the Old South. African slaves called sweet potatoes “nyami” because it reminded them of the root eaten in their home countries, and the term was eventually shortened to “yam.” A yam is starchier and less sweet. Its flesh is pale with less beta carotene and it has a lower concentration of most nutrients and less fiber. Most are imported from the Caribbean.

Dump the sweet potato mixture into the prepared skillet and press into an even layer along the bottom and up the sides. Bake for 20-25 minutes or until golden. If the edges of the potato crust get too dark, cover the quiche loosely with tin foil. Remove from the oven and add in your favorite quiche filling. A goat cheese and thyme filling makes a good match with this crust.


SAWEET!

Why wait for Grandma’s holiday casserole? Sweet spuds star on Utah menus throughout the year. Easy-toMake Sweet Potato Chips

CRUNCH TIME Cut a sweet potato into very thin slices. Combine 1 tbsp. olive oil, ½ tsp. sea salt and 1½ tsp. chili powder in a bowl. Toss the sweet potato slices in the oil mixture and arrange on baking sheet in a single layer. Bake chips in the oven for 10 minutes and then flip and roast another 10 minutes. Broil for a couple of minutes to make them nice and crispy. Sprinkle with salt while hot.

LOG HAVEN

RED ROCK BREWING

Grilled Bison Teres Major Steak with sweet potato orzo, succotash, smoked chili broth and jalapeño aioli. An unexpected change from regular to sweet potatoes side this steak on a plate filled with indigenous American flavors.

Sweet Potato Cannelloni: pasta tubes stuffed with ricotta, spinach, sage and sweet potatoes topped with Parmesan cream sauce. Cheese and sweet potatostuffed pasta tubes are flavored with traditional sage.

6451 Millcreek Canyon Rd., SLC, 801-272-8255 log-haven.com

Sauteed Shrimp Salad: watercress,

RUTH’S CHRIS STEAKHOUSE Sweet Potato Casserole: whipped sweet potatoes topped with pecan crust. A traditional American version of sweet potatoes. 275 S. West Temple, SLC, 801363-2000; 2001 Park Ave., Park City, 435-940-5070 ruthschris.com

spinach, roasted sweet potatoes, grapefruit, toasted pistachios and Gorgonzola cheese with lemon pepper dressing. An inventive mix of flavors with the sweet potatoes adding a little heft.

LE NONNE RISTORANTE ITALIANO Ravioli di Patate Dolce: raviolis stuffed with sweet potatoes and ricotta cheese and sautéed in a light creamy, parmesan sauce. There are lots of pumpkin or squash-filled ravioli dishes in different regions of Italy. This dish uses sweet potatoes instead. 129 N. 100 East, Logan, 435-752-9577 lenonne.com

254 S. 200 West, SLC, 801-521-7446; 6227 State St., Murray, 801-262-2337; 1640 W. Redstone Center, Park City, 435-575-0295 redrockbrewing.com

Red Rock Brewing’s Sauteed Shrimp Salad

FLAVOR FRIENDS Herbs & Spices: chili pepper, cilantro, cinnamon, garlic, ginger, nutmeg, rosemary, thyme, allspice, cinnamon and clove Produce: lime, onions, carrot, walnuts, oranges, coconut, pineapple, apples and potatoes Sweet: pecans, maple syrup, brown sugar, molasses and—of course— marshmallows

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DESIGN DIRECTORY Architectural Elements and Details Inside Out Architecturals 3410 S. 300 West, SLC 801-487-3274 insideoutarchitecturals.com

Details Comforts For The Home

Ward & Child— The Garden Store

6273 S. Highland Dr., Holladay 6333 S. Highland Dr., Holladay 801-364-8963 detailscomforts.com

678 S. 700 East, SLC 801-595-6622

Forsey’s Furniture Galleries

Traditional & Contemporary Lloyd Architects 573 E. 600 South, SLC 801-328-3245 lloyd-arch.com

Lecate Artisan Doors 801-901-6633 lecateartisandoors.com

2977 S. Highland Dr., SLC 801-487-0777

O.C. Tanner Jewelers

Forsey’s Craftsman House

15 S. State St. 801-532-3222

2955 S. Highland Dr., SLC 801-466-1237 forseys.com

Gatehouse No. 1

Arts and Antiques

672 S. State St., Orem 801-225-9505 gatehousestyle.com

Modern West Fine Art

Helm

412 S. 700 West, SLC 801-355-3383 modernwestfineart.com

5253 State St. Murray 801-263-1292 helmhome.com

Builders/Contractors/ Construction

John Brooks Inc 579 E. 100 South, SLC 303-698-9977 johnbrooksinc.com

Bartile 725 N. 1000 West, Centerville 801-295-3443 bartile.com

Leisure Living 2208 S. 900 East, SLC 801-487-3289 leisurelivinginc.com

Jackson & Leroy 4980 S. Highland Dr., SLC 801-277-3927 jacksonandleroy.com

RC Willey

Jaffa Group

Murray

4490 N. Forestdale Dr. Suite 202, Park City 435-615-6873 jaffagroup.com

Flooring Adib’s Rug Gallery 3092 S. Highland Dr., SLC 801-484-6364 or 800-445-RUGS adibs.com

Furniture Bernhardt Furniture Store 5251 S. State St., Murray 801-263-1292

Draper

13300 S. 200 West 801-567-2200 861 E. 6600 South 801-261-6800

Orem

693 E. University Pkwy. 801-227-8800

Riverdale

4045 S. Riverdale Rd. 801-622-7400

Salt Lake City

2301 S. 300 West 801-461-3800

Syracuse

1693 W. 2700 South 801-774-2800 rcwilley.com

San Francisco Design

Salt Lake City

2970 S. Highland Dr. 877-309-4419

Park City

1890 Bonanza Dr. 877-578-1871 sanfrandesign.com

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Home Accessories, Stationery and Jewelry Salt Lake City Park City

416 Main St. 435-940-9470 octannerjewelers.com

The Framing Establishment

Murray

6464 S. 900 East 801-265-3500

South Jordan

655 W. 10600 South 801-253-3464 theframingestablishment.com

Tabula Rasa 330 Trolley Square, SLC 801-575-5043 tabularasastationers.com

Interior Design AMB Design 4680 S. Kelly Cir., Holladay 801-272-8680 annemariebarton.com

Ivy Interiors 3174 S. Highland Dr., SLC 801-486-2257 ivyinteriorsslc.com

Jeff Landry Design 339 W. Pierpont Ave. 801-533-8530 jefflandrydesign.com

K. Rocke Design/Glass house 3910 S. Highland Dr., SLC 801-274-2720 krockedesign.com

LMK Interior Design

Salt Lake City

4626 S. Highland Dr. 801-272-9121

Palm Springs, CA. 760-325-2959 lmkinteriordesign.com


Incredible Dwellings

Sub-Zero Wolf

380 E. 1700 South, SLC 801-688-1319 incredibledwelling.com

1400 S. Foothill Dr. #212, SLC 801-582-5552 subzero-wolf.com

Osmond Designs

Orem

1660 N. State St. 801-225-2555

Camper Reparadise

Venetian Tile & Stone

2382 S. Redwood Rd., West Valley City 801-972-5211 campereparadise.com

825 W. 2400 South, SLC 801-977-8888 venetianstonegallery.com

Fiber Seal Utah

Milieu Design 75 S. 600 West, Logan 435-752-4544 milieudesign.com

Other

Landscape Design

6337 S. Highland Drive #311, SLC 801-577-8037 utah.fiberseal.com

Bockholt Landscape Architecture

Cactus & Tropicals

151 E. State St. 801-766-6448 osmonddesigns.com

Park City

Salt Lake City

Kitchen and Bath Showrooms

104 E. Main St., Suite 210 406-586-3385 bockholtlandscapearchitecture.com

Lehi

Bedrock Quartz Surfaces

West Jordan

750 Kearns Blvd., Suite 230 435-649-3856

Bozeman, MT

Lighting Oelo

Layton

970-212-3670 oelo.com

Pleasant Grove 513 W. 700 South

St. George

270 E. Riverside Dr. Suite #2 801-282-3322 bedrockquartz.com

European Marble & Granite 2575 S. 600 West, SLC 801-974-0333 europeanmarbleandgranite.net

Photography Scot Zimmerman Photography Heber City 435-654-2757 scotzimmermanphotography.com

Real Estate Windermere Real Estate winutah.com

Mountain Land Design

Salt Lake City

Red Ledges

Provo

205 N. Red Ledges Blvd, Heber City 1-877-733-5334 redledges.com

2345 S. Main St. 801-466-0990

50 E. 500 South 801-932-0027 mountainlanddesign.com

Peppertree Kitchen & Bath 7940 S. 1300 West, West Jordan 801-565-1654 peppertreekitchen.com

Shearer Designs 6300 N. Sagewood Dr. Suite H105, Snyderville 435-901-1186 shearerdesigns.com

Draper

12252 S. Draper Gate Drive 801-676-0935 cactusandtropicals.com

Ken Garff Automotive Group

28 locations statewide

5996 W. Dannon Way 2710 N. 350 West

2735 S. 2000 East 801-485-2542

Windows/Window Coverings Park City Blind & Design 1612 W. Ute Blvd. Suite 109, Park City 435-649-9665 parkcityblind.com

Sierra Pacific Windows 1880 N. 2200 West, SLC 801-973-7170 sierrapacificwindows.com

kengarff.com

Statement Required by 39 U.S.C. 3526 showing the Ownership, Management and Circulation of UTAH STYLE & DESIGN magazine, published four times a year. ISSN 1941-2169. Annual subscription price: $14.95 1. Location of known Office of Publication is 515 S 700 E Suite 3i, Salt Lake City, Utah 84102 2. Location of known Headquarters of General Business offices of the Publishers is 515 S 700 E Suite 3i, Salt Lake City, Utah 84102 3. The names and addresses of the publisher and editor are: Publisher: Margaret Mary Shuff, 515 S 700 E Suite 3i, Salt Lake City, Utah 84102 Editor: Brad Mee, 515 S 700 E Suite 3i, Salt Lake City, Utah 84102 4. The owner is Utah Partners Publishing LLC, 515 S 700 E Suite 3i, Salt Lake City, Utah 84102 5. Known bondholders, mortgages, and other security holders owning or holding 1 percent or more of total amount of bonds, mortgages or other securities are: None. 6. Extent and nature of circulation Average No. No. Copies Copies Each of Single Issue Issue During Published Preceding Nearest to 12 Months Filing Date A. Total Number of Copies Printed

C. Total Paid Distribution

2179 S. Commerce Center Dr., Suite 500, West Valley City 801-875-4460 thestonecollection.com

Welding/Fabrication

7,689

10,633

D. Total Free or Nominal Rate Distribution 3,718 6,463 1. Free or Nominal Rate Outside-County Copies 2. Free or Nominal Rate In-County Copies 1,526 3. Free or Nominal Rate Copies Mailed at Other Classes - 4. Free or Nominal Rate Distribution Outside the Mail 995 1,145 E. Total Free or Nominal Rate Distribution

6,239

7,608

F. Total Distribution 13,928

18,241

G. Copies Not Distributed 1,905 1,430 H. TOTAL

The Stone Collection

15,833 19,671

B. Paid Circulation 1. Mailed Outside-County Paid Subscriptions. 3,687 8,094 2. Mailed In-County Paid Subscriptions. 1,441 3. Paid Distribution Outside the Mails including Sales Through Dealers and Carriers, Street Vendors, Counter Sales, and Other Paid Distribution Outside USPSÂŽ. 2,561 2,539 4. Paid Distribution by Other Classes of Mail. - -

15,833

I. Percent Paid 7. I certify that all statements made by me above are correct and complete.

19,671

55% 58%

Meta Design 3415 W. 1820 South, Salt Lake City 801-972-6382 metadesignslc.com

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SOURCES KITCHEN DESIGN WINNING RECIPE

Pages 48-51 Contractor: Raykon Construction, Salem, raykonconstruction.com; Interior Design: Caitlin Creer, Caitline Creer Interiors, Holladay, caitlincreerinteriors.com; Architecture: Landform Designs, Bountiful, landforms.com; Cabinets: Devine Cabinets, Provo, divinecabinets.com; Appliances: Mountain Land Design, SLC, mountainlanddesign.com; Lighting: Galaxy Lighting, Lindon, galaxielighting.com; Plumbing Fixtures: Mountainland Supply, Orem, mountainlandsupply.com; Marble and granite: JAB Marble and Granite, SLC, 801-425-1454

HOUSE WARMING

Pages 66-73 Style Library, stylelibrary.com; Leuca Floral, Logan, leucafloral.com; Liv Design Collective, Bountiful, livdesigncollective.com; Raykon Construction, Salem, raykonconstruction.com; Alice Lane Home Collection, SLC, alicelanehome.com; Glass House, SLC, glasshouse.com; Ward & Child—The Garden Store, SLC, 801-595-6622; O.C. Tanner Jewelers, SLC, octannerjewelers.com; Cara Fox, foxgroupconstruction.com; Matt Dickamore, dentonhouse.com; Robert McArthur, robertmcarthurstudios.com; Don Brady, donbradydesign.com

A PERFECT FIT

Pages 74-81 Architect: Dallas S. Davis AIA, Elliott Workgroup, Park City, elliottworkgroup.com; Contractor: Brian Brassey, Brassey & Company, Park City, brasseyco. com; Cabinets, custom closets, millwork, stair treads and custom interior doors: Brent Davis, Davis Mill & Cabinet, Genola, davismillandcabinet.com; Countertops: Artisan Marble & Granite, SLC, artisanmarbleandgranite.com; Fireplace masonry: All Seasons Masonry, Orem, asmmasonry.wixsite. com; Tile: Gen 3 Tile, SLC, 801-913-1744; Electrical: Arc Blue Electric, Ogden, arcblueelectric.com Mechanical: Thermal Engineering, SLC, radiantplans.com; Windows and exterior doors: Sierra Pacific Windows, SLC, sierrapacificwindows. com; Kitchen Countertops: The Stone Collection, SLC, thestonecollection.com; Fireplace: Alpine Gas Fireplaces, SLC, alpinefireplaces.com; Wood flooring: ProSource, SLC, prosourcewholesale.com; Appliances: Mountainland Design, SLC, mountainlanddesign.com; Plumbing fixtures: Ferguson, SLC, ferguson.com; Lighting fixtures: Lighting Design, SLC, lightingdesign.com

ELEGANCE & EASE

Pages 84-95 Interior Design and furnishings : Catherine Goodsell, Catherine Goodsell Interiors, Holladay, catherinegoodsellinteriors.com; Architect: Steve Vanze and Wayne Adams, Barnes Vanze Architects, Washington DC, barnesvanze.com; Contractor: Lance Howell, The Biltmore Co, Holladay; Landscape design: Mike Kaiser, Kaiser Trabue Landscape Architecture, Nashville, Tenn., kaisertrabue.com;

Garden Design: Heidi Brewer, Empress Garden Design, Holladay; Landscape installation: Eschenfelder Landscaping, SLC, eschenfelderlandscaping.com Page 86 Entry Custom runner: Regency Royale, SLC, regencyroyale.com Page 87 Living Room Custom Drapes in C&C Milano fabric, John Brooks Inc., SLC, johnbrooksinc.com Page 88 Dining Room Custom Selenite chandelier: Ron Dier Design, rondierdesign.com; Grasscloth wallcovering: Phillip Jeffries, phillipjeffries.com Page 89 Breakfast Room Bronze Chandelier, Visual Comfort, visualcomfort. com; Tissage wool rug, Regency Royale, SLC, regencyroyale.com; Hostess chairs in Perennials fabric, Town Studio, townstudio.com Page 89 Family Room Chandelier: Urban Electric, urbanelectric.com; Leather swivel chairs, Lee Insdustires, leeindustries. com; Arm chairs in Kravel fabric: McGuire Furniture, mcguirefurniture.com Page 90 Master Bedroom Custom Drapes in C&C Milano fabric, John Brooks Inc., SLC, johnbrooksinc.com; Rug: Marc Phillips, marcphillipsrugs.com; Custom bed in Castel fabric: Catherine Goodsell Interiors, Holladay, catherinegoodsellinteriors.com Page 90 Sitting Area Custom side chairs in Lee Jofa fabric and custom fringe: Catherine Goodsell Interiors, Holladay, catherinegoodsellinteriors.com Sofa: Janus et Cie, janusetcie.com Table lamps: Arteriors, arteriorshome.com Page 91 Hallway Bench Custom pillows: Kelly Wearstler, Rose Tarlow and Ebanista with Samuel & Sons, Catherine Goodsell Interiors, Holladay, catherinegoodsellinteriors.com Pages 92-93 Guest Suite Plaid wing chairs and sofa in Sunbrella fabric: Lee Industries, leeindustries.com Side cabinets: Noir, noirfurniturela.com Canopy bed: RH, restorationhardware.com Page 94 Sun Room Outdoor sofa covered in Perennials fabric: perennialsfabrics.com McGuire chairs in Perennials fabric: McGuire Furniture, mcguirefurniture.com Side table: Noir, noirfurniturela.com

RANCH DRESSING

Pages 96-107 Interior Design: Rion Locke and Richard Miller , LMK Interior Design, SLC, lmkinteriordesign.com; Architect: Mark Walker, Otto Walker, Park City, ottowalker.com; Contractor: Norm Provan, Promark Development, LLC, Kamas, 435-785-2003 and Mike Williams and Dave Williams, Artistic Builders, Inc., Bountiful, 801-298-4550; Front door and interior doors: Dustin Hatch Frontier Woodworks, Kamas, 435-513-1093; Cabinets: Travis Hatch, Summit Cabinet, Kamas, 435-783-4300; Countertops: Cory Ellsworth, Italia Granite, SLC, italiagranite.com; Windows: Windsor Windows, windsorwindows.com

HOME IS WHERE THE ART IS

Pages 108-119 Architect and Designer: WOW Atelier, SLC, 385-2025862, be-wow.com; Contractor: Paulsen

Construction, SLC, 801-484-5545, paulsenconstruction.com; Interior Designer: J. Scott Anderson, SLC, 801-486-3821; Landscape Designer: LOCI Landscape Architecture, SLC, 801-906-0399, loci-slc.com; Windows: Pella, pella.com Page 108 Exterior Ceramic sculpture: Jun Kaneko, junkaneko.com Page 110 Exterior Wall Log walls with chinking: Satterwhite Log Homes, satterwhite-log-homes.com Page 111 Entry Console tables: J. Scott Anderson, SLC, 801-486-3821; Benches: Lee Industries, leeindustries.com; Lamps: Circa Lighting, circalighting.com; Sand paintings: Charles Henderson Pages 112-113 Great Room Custom sofa and bar stools: Hickory Chair Furniture Co, hickorychair.com; Lounge chair with oak frame: Lee Industries, leeindustries.com; Armless lounge chairs and ottoman: Brown Jordan, brownjordan. com; Custom coffee table: J. Scott Anderson, SLC, 801-486-3821; Lighting: Circa Lighting, circalighting. com; Mixed media art: Dolan Geiman, Modern West Fine Art, SLC, 801-355-3383, modernwestfineart. com; Bronze sculpture: James Fraser Page 115 Seating Nook Oil painting: Jeff Pugh Page 115 Kitchen Custom dining table: J. Scott Anderson, SLC, 801486-3821; Dining chairs: Hickory Chair Furniture Co, hickorychair.com; Lighting: Circa Lighting, circalighting.com Page 115 Art with Chair Oil painting: Tom Judd, Modern West Fine Art, SLC, 801-355-3383, modernwestfineart.com; Wood and metal chair: Paul Villinski Page 115 Guest Bedroom Custom bed: J. Scott Anderson, SLC, 801-486-3821; Linens: Amity Home, amityhome.com; Stools: Lee Industries, leeindustries.com Lighting: Circa Lighting, circalighting.com; Acrylic painting: Melinda K. Hall Oil and watercolor paintings: Tony Abeyta Page 116 Master Bedroom Custom bed: J. Scott Anderson, SLC, 801-486-3821; Linens: Traditions, tlathome.com; Bedside tables: Theodore Alexander, theodorealexander.com; Lighting: Circa Lighting, circalighting.com; Crossbase leather bench: Hickory Chair Furniture Co, hickorychair.com; Draperies: Carleton House Fabrics, carletonhouse.com; Leather panel fireplace: WOW Atelier, SLC, 385-202-5862, be-wow.com; Painted wood sculpture: Sheldon Harvey, Modern West Fine Art, SLC, 801-355-3383, modernwestfineart.com Page 117 Master Bathroom Mixed media art: Jann Haworth, Modern West Fine Art, SLC, 801-355-3383, modernwestfineart.com Page 118 Office Custom desk: J. Scott Anderson, SLC, 801-486-3821; Desk chair: Hickory Chair Furniture Co, hickorychair.com; Mixed media art: Dave Newman, Modern West Fine Art, SLC, 801-355-3383, modernwestfineart.com; Oil painting: Doug Snow

Sources are acknowledgements of services and items provided by featured design principals and homeowners. Those not listed are either private, pre-existing or available through the professionals noted.

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 ($14.95); 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., PO Box 820, Boca Raton, FL 33429. Copyright 2019, 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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HOT LIST

CHUNK OF CHANGE Looking for a bold way to anchor your room with simple, natural style? Well, if you’re already a fan of wood, this should be an easy move. First, pass on anything delicate or dainty. Instead, choose a chunky wood piece that delivers a heavy dose of warmth and beauty without any overworked details or distractions.

Above: Furnishings from Jayson Home, jaysonhome.com

1

2

3

1. Shanghai bench, $608, Glass House, SLC 2. Manhattan lounge chair, Mimi London, to the trade, John Brooks Inc., SLC 3. Parmesan stool by Chista, to the trade, John Brooks Inc., SLC 4. Theodore dining table, $2,750, Root’d, Park City 5. Highlands sofa by Stickley, starting at $4,800, Forsey’s Furniture Galleries, SLC 6. Rustic Patina accent chest, $2,132, Bernhardt Interiors, Murray

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