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LEAFY GREENS WONDROUS WICKER
DAHLIAS FOR DAYS
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Summer
78 pages of inspiring ideas & sun-drenched spaces
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Come Home to Helm Your home is far more than function. It’s a place where luxury, comfort, and leisure come together to create spaces where you want to spend time. With one of the state’s largest collections of high-end furniture, Helm can help you experience a higher standard of luxury living. Come visit our 30,000 square-foot showroom and speak with our team of interior designers to see how you can connect with your home in a way that speaks to your personal vision and unique sense of creative expression. Come home to comfort. Come home to luxury. Come home to Helm.
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PHOTO LINDSAY SALAZAR
SUMMER 2022 | VOLUME 26 | NUMBER 3
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BY DON SKYPECK
Why be sunburnt and style-starved? As these pulled-from-the-archives spaces prove, striking overhead structures can transform patios, porches and decks into shaded sanctuaries with all the comfort and character of rooms indoors.
LAND OF ENCHANTMENT BY BRAD MEE PHOTOS BY JOSHUA CALDWELL
With spectacular structures, wondrous water features and flourishing gardens, landscape architects Jeremy Fillmore and Ryan Talbot deliver the splendor of Tuscany to a hillside in Alpine.
ON THE COVER COVER IMAGE BY LINDSAY SALAZAR
In Holladay, a chic poolhouse boasts freshly fashioned living spaces, indoors and out.
UNDER COVER
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COOL GUISE BY BRAD MEE PHOTOS BY LINDSAY SALAZAR
Behind the facade of a 1930s cottage, Jason Wilde surprises with a welcoming pool house decked out with fresh classic style and charming details galore.
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ESCAPE PLAN BY BRAD MEE PHOTOS BY LACEY ALEXANDER
In southern Utah, a panoramic setting and a mix of Spanish colonial and contemporary styles inspire a family’s idyllic retreat.
108 STARTING FRESH BY BRAD MEE
RESPLENDENT REDUX
PHOTOS BY LINDSAY SALAZAR
BY BRAD MEE
AND SCOTT DAVIS
PHOTOS BY JOSHUA CALDWELL &
In Salt Lake City’s historic Harvard Yale neighborhood, Tom and Cara Fox combine traditional style with 21stcentury ease and elegance for a young family’s new home.
SAVANNAH BUSWELL
In a posh Provo enclave, a team of talented pros imagines an esteemed estate with masterful moves and fresh traditional style.
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CONTENTS |
SUMMER 2022
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DEPARTMENTS 46
OUTDOOR LIVING
GARDEN VARIETY BY BRAD MEE
Spectacular public gardens across Utah inspire freshpicked finds and fixtures for stylish outdoor living.
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CRAVINGS
FIRED UP BY DON SKYPECK
Ryan Crafts has a simple formula for elevating the season’s fresh-picked flavor: Utah peaches + hot grill = summertime bliss
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DESIGN DIRECTORY A resourceful guide of materials, places and products.
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SOURCES A listing of this issue’s people, places and products. NOW TRENDING
A DALLIANCE WITH DAHLIAS Floral designer Robert Upwall weighs in on summertime’s showstopper.
style file EDITOR’S PICK MOST WANTED MEET THE MAKER DISH SWATCH WATCH FLOWER CLASS
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Find more design inspiration at utahstyleanddesign.com
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Direct Importers of the World’s Finest Rugs
“All Ablaze with Summer Color.”
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
THE TEAM
PUBLISHER
ART DIRECTOR
DIRECTOR OF SALES
Margaret Mary Shuff
Jeanine Miller
Cori Davis
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF
PHOTOGRAPHY CONTRIBUTORS
ACCOUNT EXECUTIVES
Brad Mee
Lacey Alexander Savannah Buswell Joshua Caldwell Scott Davis Lindsay Salazar
Janette Erickson Scott Haley Sherry Moffat Launnee Symes
ASSISTANT EDITORS
Avrey Evans Josh Petersen Christie Porter Jeremy Pugh
Arianna Jimenez
Don Skypeck
WEB EDITOR/SOCIAL MANAGER
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Fax
/ 801-485-5133
U TA H S T Y L E A N D D E S I G N | S U M M E R 2 0 2 2
/ magazine@utahstyleanddesign.com
Marie Speed
PUBLISHERS OF
Salt Lake magazine Utah Bride & Groom Utah Style & Design Boca Raton magazine Worth Avenue magazine Mizner’s Dream Delray Beach magazine
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/ 801-485-5100
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF
Jeanne Greenberg
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EDITOR’S NOTE
On the Outs MY LEGS ARE MUD-CAKED, my forearms are bramble-scratched and my face is covered with either a three-day beard or dirt—or both. I’ll learn which when I hose off after finishing my yard work. It’s not my best look, but for me this is pure bliss. Like millions of Americans, I love gardening, and our yard is the most doted on part of our home. I remember years ago, when most yards seemed little more than a spread of lawn, a swing set on sand or a shady spot for a dog house. More vividly, I recall unruly gardens where a grumbling kid and his two brothers spent days pulling weeds for their summertime allowances. (I’m still yanking those wretched plants, but I don’t get paid.) Now look at what yards—aka landscapes and gardens—have become. They’re prized parts of the home with their cool pools, flourishing flower and veggie beds, handsome pergolas and outdoor living spaces as dressed up and decked out as their interior counterparts. Outdoors is where we love to live.
Is it any surprise then that architects, designers and builders tell us that stylish outdoor living spaces top most of their clients’ wish lists? During a recent survey by the New Home Trends Institute (NHTI), 300 such pros predicted that “a connection to the outdoors and nature would be the largest driver of home design choices over the next three years.” It certainly inspires us here at Utah Style & Design, as you’ll discover in the following pages. A breathtaking Alpine hillside, a killer pool house, a wondrous Provo courtyard, a red-rock desert retreat, chic covered patios and much more—it’s all there. When it comes to featuring and fantasizing about stylish outdoor living, we are all in.
BRAD MEE, EDITOR IN CHIEF
Follow us on Instagram @utahstyledesign
MO D E R N + CO N T E M PO R A RY A R T O F T H E W EST
LOUIS RIBAK
BEATRICE MANDELMAN
412 S 700 W SLC, UT 84104 | modernwestfineart.com | 801.355.3383
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L M K interior design
4626 S. Highland Drive - SLC, UT 84117 - 801.272.9121 @lmkinteriordesign www.lmkinteriordesign.com
style file
SUMMER | 2022
FRINGE BENEFITS PHOTO COURTESY OF CURREY & COMPANY
A spray of hand-trimmed raffia teams with white iron and sandstone-finished wood to give the linen-shaded Seychelles table lamp a chic, summertime vibe that charms year-round.
Seychelles Table Lamp by Jamie Beckwith for Currey & Company, to the trade, Curate To The Trade, SLC, curatetothetrade.com
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style file |
MOST WANTED
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DREAM WEAVERS Indoors and out, few things capture summertime’s relaxed, dreamy vibe better than wonderfully woven rattans, wickers, grasses and more.
Hanging Rattan Bench, $998, Serena & Lily, serenaandlily.com
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1. Cypress Accent Table, $3,597, LMK Interior Design, SLC, lmkinteriordesign.com 2. Seagrass Dome Pendant, $744, The Black Goose Design, Midvale, theblackgoosedesign.com 3. Coca Plum Mirror, $699, Osmond Designs, Lehi and Orem, osmonddesigns.com 4. Kenis Grey Braided Bowl, $350, O.C. Tanner Jewelers, SLC, octannerjewelers.com 5. The Newport Outdoor Recliner, $1,726, The Garden Store, SLC, thegardenstoresaltlake. com 6. Santorini Floor Lamp with Woven Shade, $439, Crate & Barrel, Murray, crateandbarrel.com 7. Wicker Pull-Up Bench, $1,090, Helm, Murray, helmhome.com 8. Seagrass Glasses and Pitcher, $16-$48 each, Cosy House, St. George, becosyhouse.com
STYLE & SYMMETRY
Bring your vision of simplicity and order together with the incomparable symmetry of stone bookmatching. The Stone Collection is home to the finest selection of natural and engineered stone found under one roof.
2179 South Commerce Center Drive West Valley City, Utah 85040 801.875.4460
thestonecollection.com arizona | colorado | florida | texas | utah Stone: Crystal Venato Quartzite
MEET THE MAKER
CONCRETE THINKING Inspired by nature and a passion for plants, artist Sydney Phetmisay crafts shapely concrete pots, planters and accents for the home.
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FROM HER SMALL home studio in Salt Lake City, artist Sydney Phetmisay creates softly pigmented concrete planters, flower pots and home accessories. They come in an array of nature-inspired shapes and colors, invoking their namesakes, like dried apricot, desert cactus and prickly pear. Phetmisay sells her creations under the moniker The Moody Cactus, inspired by her love of house plants and the need to create colorful homes for them. Phetmisay also makes concrete trays of all sizes and surprising shapes like rippling waves and arches as well as circles and ovals. “I love curves because they are so unexpected with concrete,” she says. Other offerings include unique décor and accessories for the home: plant propagation stations, ornaments and card holders. She is also experimenting with bespoke concrete tables and plant stands. “They’re functional art pieces,” says Phetmisay, whose work is subtle, soft in texture, rich in color and instantly recognizable. In the throws of creativity, Phetmisay describes herself cheekily as “a mad scientist.” And why not? While crafting her concrete offerings, Phetmisay will also complete a B.S. in chemistry this year and looks to pursue further education in fine art. The Moody Cactus pieces are available online and at Salt Lake City’s Thyme and Place plant boutique, Salt & Honey Market and the Utah Museum of Contemporary Art gift shop. themoodycactus.com
BY CHRISTIE PORTER
style file |
European Antiques
Home Decor
French Imports
915 East 12600 South Draper, UT 385.308.8249 @la_petite_maison_antiques
Trade program for Interior Designers
Gifts
DISH
CAPRESE SEASON 3 ways to serve summer’s favorite salad
+ + + 40
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WHETHER PICKED FROM your garden or a farmers market bin, Utah’s vine-ripened tomatoes are now at their peak. And while there are countless ways to celebrate them this season, for us, caprese tops the list. These easy-to-make variations of this classic salad will let you serve and savor it your way.
Sliced hothouse tomatoes
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Basil leaves / Olive Oil / Burrata SLICE tomatoes and arrange on a plate. Carefully cut burrata into slices or wedges, being sure to get shell and filling, and place on plate. Garnish with fresh, washed basil and drizzle with olive oil.
Grape tomatoes
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Bocconcini / Olives / Arugula / Balsamic vinegar / Olive Oil PLACE equal amounts of grape
tomatoes, pitted kalamata olives and bocconcini in a bowl. Drizzle with balsamic vinegar and olive oil, and toss gently.
Half a yellow tomato
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Goat cheese / Prepared Pesto Cut tomato in half. Cut a tiny slice from the bottom so tomato sits securely on a plate. Using a small oiled ice cream disher, scoop goat cheese onto tomato. Crisscross with pesto drizzle.
PHOTOS (LEFT) ADAM FINKLE
style file |
Your future kitchen starts here. Curate your custom Sub-Zero, Wolf, and Cove appliance package at the Roth Living Showroom. Schedule your in-person appointment today!
rsvpslc@rothliving.com | 801.582.5552 1400 S. Foothill Dr. | Suite 212 | Salt Lake City, UT 84108 55343
style file |
SWATCH WATCH
LEAFY GREENS Lively, garden-inspired fabrics bring the outdoors in with verdant hues and leafy patterns.
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Clockwise from upper left: Bamboo & Bird from Sanderson; Porquerolles from Casamance; Caori from Casamance; Manila Embroidery from Sanderson; Imperial Velvet from thesign; Tigris from Pierre Frey; Sconset from Peter Fasano; Lush by Calvin Fabrics; Vintage Deux from Moku; Nomad from Christopher Farr Cloth. Available to the trade, John Brooks Inc., SLC, johnbrooksinc.com
PROMOTION
SPOTLIGHT
Your source for the latest discoveries, products, services and design solutions.
Cosy House It’s the little things that add layers of beauty and comfort to your home, which is what we love to do at Cosy House. From our relaxed, lux home furnishings to our thoughtfully curated selection of finishing touches like these pretty and practical kitchen must-haves, each will bring a little joy to your daily routine.
904 W. 1600 South, St. George becosyhouse.com @becosyhouse
Metro Tile
Expert Tile Contractors Metro Tile is Utah’s premier tile installation company providing luxury residential and commercial tiling and flooring Services. For over 50 years, From residential bathroom remodels to large scale commercial projects, get in touch with Metro Tile for a free estimate on your upcoming project.
189 W. Gregson Avenue, Salt Lake City metrotileutah.com @metrotile
The Garden Store For more than 27 years, The Garden Store has combined outdoor and indoor living environments. Let us help you create a unique space that is the perfect blend of garden and home.
678 S. 700 East, Salt Lake City thegardenstoresaltlake.com @thegardenstoresaltlake
style file |
FLOWER SCHOOL
A DALLIANCE WITH DAHLIAS Floral designer Robert Upwall weighs in on summertime’s garden showstopper. WHEN LATE-SUMMER'S rays have left your gardens scorched and sparse, few flowers retain their brilliance like dahlias. The perennial is well adjusted to torrid temperatures and features fashionably late blooms that liven up waning landscapes. Their fanciful spiraling petals and vivid colors are summer bliss, both outdoors and inside. To make the most of the season's star, Robert Upwall of Every Blooming Thing offers tips on cutting, preserving and arranging dahlias.
CUTTING Like other garden flowers, the best time to cut dahlias is just before they fully bloom. “If the flower is fully bloomed out, they’re not going to last as long,” says Upwall. “But if cut at the right time, you can enjoy them for three to four days before they wilt.” When blooms are ready to be harvested, use a sharp knife and cut the stem at an angle.
PRESERVING With your blooms in hand, it’s time to act fast, as dahlias are extremely prone to wilting. To extend their showy color, Upwall suggests “putting the stems in really fresh hot water.” Water between 160 to 170 de-
grees is best, as the flower is sensitive to cold temperatures. If you aren’t ready to put the blooms on display, store them in the garage or basement out of direct sunlight and never in a fridge or freezer.
ARRANGING Upwall loves pairing dahlias with other summertime favorites like sunflowers, but the versatile flower is also beautiful in a bouquet with ranunculus and garden roses. Or keep it simple by layering various colors of dahlias together. Once arranged, put your dahlias out just before your get-together or patio party to ensure the blooms stay vibrant and fresh.
There are 42 species of dahlias, and these three are top picks for florists and garden lovers alike. Dinnerplate Dahlias
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Pompon Dahlias
Cafe Au Lait Dahlias
BY AVREY EVANS
IN FULL BLOOM
OUTDOOR LIVING
GARDEN
variety
Public gardens across Utah inspire fresh-picked finds and fixtures for stylish outdoor living.
BY BR A D M EE
CLASSIC INSPIRATION AT RED BUTTE GARDEN Formality enjoys a surprising twist in the Ruth P. Eccles Herb Garden, where loose curves—rather than traditional diamonds and squares—shape a boxwood parterre woven through lush beds of fragrant herbs and edible flowers. redbuttegarden.org
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ROSES AND ROMANCE AT RED BUTTE GARDEN
GARDEN PHOTOS COURTESY OF RED BUTTE GARDEN
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The fragrance, color and incomparable beauty of roses charm The Sarah J. McCarthey & Family Rose Garden at Red Butte Garden. Forget about marching though rows of labeled cultivars. Here you meander through a diverse presentation of informally planted varieties—hybrid teas and floribundas to climbers and miniatures—as they mix with companion plants to enchant all who visit. The Rose Garden boasts color-specific sections, from a blush-toned Wedding Garden to a robustly red Marin Overlook. redbuttegarden.org 1. Shade Hat, $34, Cactus & Tropicals, SLC, cactusandtropicals.com 2. Long Floral Garden Gloves, $40, Anthropologie, SLC, anthropologie.com 3. Hidcote Table/Stool, to the trade, Curate to the Trade, SLC, curatetothetrade.com 4. Locke Console Tray, $495, The Fox Shop, Holladay, thefoxshop.co 5. Passaros II Fountain, $742, The Garden Store, SLC, thegardenstoresaltlake.com 6. Deauville Pillow Cover, $168, Serena & Lily, serenaandlily.com 7. Rose +Vine Outdoor Pillow, $128, Terrain, shopterrain.com 8. Lutyens Bench, $1,693, The Garden Store, SLC, thegardenstoresaltlake.com
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OUTDOOR LIVING
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SCULPTURAL DRAMA AT RED HILLS DESERT GARDEN
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Located in the red rocks of St. George, the nearly 5-acre desert conservation garden boasts paths winding through a vermillion landscape of 5,000 water-efficient plants, a stream stocked with native and endangered fish, a replica slot canyon and prehistoric dinosaur tracks found onsite dating back 200 million years. Visitors leave inspired and informed about creating localscapes that require less water and maintenance. redhillsdesertgarden.com 1. Bahia Outdoor Pendant, $1,586, The Garden Store, SLC, thegardenstoresaltlake.com 2. Utah Seed Postcards, Natural History Museum of Utah, SLC, nhmu.utah.edu 3. El Paso Planted Bowl, $80, Cactus & Tropicals, SLC, cactusandtropicals.com 4. Kettal Landscape Via Double Deckchair, to the trade, John Brooks, Inc., SLC, johnbrooksinc.com 5. Wide Stripe Outdoor Pillow, $46 and 6. Mojave Indoor/Outdoor Pillow, $50, Crate & Barrel, Murray, crateandbarrel.com 7. Callista Outdoor Stool, to the trade, Curate To The Trade, SLC, curatetothetrade.com 8. Herman Miller Eames Outdoor Wire Chair, $680, Henriksen Butler, SLC and St. George, hbdg.com 9. Lyman Whitaker Lotus Wind Sculpture, $1,500/large, Datura Gallery, Ivins, 435-674-9595
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GARDEN PHOTO COURTESY WASHINGTON COUNTY WATER CONSERVANCY DISTRICT
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DISTRIBUTED BY:
VISIT OUR SHOWROOM 7940 S. 1300 W. WEST JORDAN UT 84088 801-565-1654 PEPPERTREEKITCHEN.COM
OUTDOOR LIVING
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NATURAL EASE AT THE OGDEN NATURE CENTER
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Peaceful walking trails weave through woods and tall-grass meadows in the heart of Ogden, where a 152-acre nature preserve and educational center draw visitors who love learning about and connecting with nature while enjoying the tranquility of untamed landscapes, birding and wildlife viewing. ogdennaturecenter.org
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GARDEN PHOTO COURTESY THE OGDEN NATURE CENTER
1. McGuire Round Concrete Stool, $2,847, LMK Interior Design, SLC, lmkinteriordesign.com 2. Solar Ambient Ray Outdoor Floor Lamp by Gloster, to the trade, Curate to the Trade, SLC curatetothetrade.com 3. Perennials Lake Stripe Pillow Cover, $148 and 4. Mendocino Linen Throw, $228, Serena & Lily, serenaandlily. com 5. Linear Planter Bench by Ore, to the trade, ore.design 6. Beacon Sconce with Shepherd’s Hook, $895, Hammerton Studio, SLC, studio.hammerton.com 7. Treasure Garden 11-foot Auto-Tilt Market Umbrella, $840, Leisure Living, SLC, leisurelivinginc.com 8. H Lounge Chair by Brown Jordan, to the trade, Curate to the Trade, SLC, curatetothetrade.com
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CELEBRATING 25 YEARS/ARCHIVES
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UNDER
COVER
Why be sunburnt and style-starved? As these 10 pulled-fromthe-archives spaces prove, striking overhead structures and ceilings can transform patios, porches and decks into shaded sanctuaries with all the comfort and character of indoor rooms. BY DON SKY PECK
1. A white pergola shades a Salt Lake City home’s chic poolside dining and lounge areas. The architecture’s clean, contemporary lines provide a striking backdrop for modern-meets-classic furnishings paired with dashing black-and-white striped cushions. Styled by Val Rasmussen. Summer 2011. PHOTO BY REBEKAH WESTOVER
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2. Beneath a ceiling painted pale blue to emulate the sky, a backyard porch is fully furnished to provide a shaded place to relax and entertain. The setting’s southern exposure extends use and enjoyment of the space even into the year’s coolest months. Landscape and interior design by Rob McFarland, Ward and Child Design. Summer 2006. PHOTO BY SCOT ZIMMERMAN
3. A broad arbor shades three charming garden swings hanging beneath a uniquely curved structure designed by Northland Design. The arbor serves as both a grand focal point in the landscape and a magical spot from which to take in the splendid gardens. Summer 2020. PHOTO BY JOSHUA CALDWELL 4. The broad-shouldered peaked roof of a Cottonwood Heights home shades its wide deck. The outdoor dining area sits just steps from the home’s indoor kitchen, facilitating its use through much of the year. Overlooking a wooded landscape and a natural stone waterfall, the wood deck and its neutral tones complement the intense green of the gardens beyond. Summer 2008. PHOTO BY SCOT ZIMMERMAN
5. As a stylish alternative to a built-in structure, two large umbrellas create a canvas canopy for this outdoor living space. A tall stacked-stone fireplace anchors the patio and comfortably furnished sitting area. Landscape design and furnishings by Landform Design Group. Spring 2018. PHOTO BY ALAN AND WHITNEY WILBUR
6. A triangular steel pergola is equipped with retractable canopies to shade a similarly shaped Batu hardwood deck below. Sleek outdoor furnishings perfectly complement the St. George dwelling’s dramatic architecture, which was conceived by architects Rob McQuay and Todd Benson and built by Markay Johnson Construction. Summer 2015. PHOTO BY SCOT ZIMMERMAN
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7. In Holladay, a guesthouse’s long, shaded porch overlooks a tranquil pond filled with water lilies and goldfish reminiscent of a Monet painting. Classic Adirondack chairs add to the scene’s timeless style. Landscape design by Willie Eschenfelder. Spring 2016. PHOTO BY ADAM FINKLE
8. In Park City, a sloped, beamed ceiling covers a patio located just outside the home’s interior bar and lounge area, making the outdoor space ideal for intimate get-togethers and casual dining. The hefty overhead structure, supported by stone walls and beefy columns, lends a decidedly rustic European feel to the outdoor space. Interior design by Doran Taylor and architecture by Brighton Architectural Group. Summer 2016. PHOTO BY SCOT ZIMMERMAN 9. In SLC’s Avenues neighborhood, widely spaced beams partially shade a modern home’s courtyard enclosed by brick walls and expansive windows connecting to the home‘s kitchen. Classic butterfly chairs gather around a sunken circular fire pit, adding to the space’s hip, modern vibe. Summer 2007. PHOTO BY SCOT ZIMMERMAN
10. In Salt Lake City’s Federal Heights neighborhood, dappled sunlight filters through a patio’s wisteria-covered trellises and an open-framed roof. The outdoor living space seems transported from Provence, with lux furnishings and potted topiaries adding to its beauty. The patio’s stone floor is level with that of the adjoining kitchen and family room, making this outdoor oasis a natural extension of the home’s indoor spaces. Interior design by Michele Dunker. Spring 2017. PHOTO BY SCOT ZIMMERMAN
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LAND OF
Enchantment With spectacular structures, wondrous water features and flourishing gardens, Jeremy Fillmore and Ryan Talbot bring the splendor of Tuscany to an Alpine hillside. BY BRAD MEE
PHOTOS BY JOSHUA CALDWELL
Breathtaking mountain views grace the three-acre property located in Alpine. A grand pavilion provides a large gathering spot surrounded by glorious gardens, inviting patios and an herb-lined path leading to a small vineyard below. OPPOSITE: Custom, cast-bronze scuppers spill from a patio wall crowned with a tumble of vibrant mandevilla and trailing Supertunia.
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The sweet perfume of lavender and roses fills the air meeting the melodic sound of chirping birds and buzzing bees. Warmth emanates from sun-washed stone walls and fountains splash among lush gardens. It’s the kind of place one can relish even with eyes closed, and that is exactly what owners Noel and Carrie Vallejo desired when they decided to transform their Alpine mountainside property into a hillside paradise inspired by the intoxicating landscapes of Tuscany. Achieving this blissful vision fell to landscape architects Jeremy Fillmore and Ryan Talbot of Northland Design. Collaborating closely with Noel, these pros quickly understood that they were to deliver more than sublime beauty to the three-acre property. “There was to be an emotion and feeling to the landscape,” Fillmore explains. The designers worked with their client to ensure every element—from grand gestures to small, handwrought details—enhanced the journey through a landscape dotted with memorable features and extraordinary destinations. During their initial visit, Fillmore and Talbot looked beyond the home’s simple lawns and time-worn pool. “All we saw were
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Landscape architects Ryan Talbot and Jeremy Fillmore, principals of Northland Design.
incredible views and humongous potential,” Fillmore recalls. The sprawling property was enclosed by a perimeter wall Noel had constructed from stones harvested from his land; mountain and valley scenes rose above the walls at every turn. The architects’ challenge was to transform the simple yard into an emotive adventure, an experiential dreamscape. From the get-go, Noel asked Fillmore and Talbot to include the finest of everything in their design concept. “Noel is a big thinker,” Talbot explains. “He wanted to know about the best options and gave us freedom to design and be creative without constraints of any kind.” Taking their client’s lead, the duo crafted a daring concept anchored by extraordinary structures, dazzling water features and lush gardens that anchored the project’s design. “The initial concept guided the project generally but not specifically,” says Fillmore, explaining that many of the finer points evolved from figurative brushstrokes made during the property’s transformation. “Noel would say, ‘Let’s paint,’ meaning let’s play around with the details until they feel just right emotionally.” A children’s playhouse tied to the grand pavilion, a granite jumping platform added to the pool’s end and custom pots handmade to top stone pillars are just a few of many alterations and additions made to enhance the already stellar design. “It was a unique pleasure to work so intimately with an owner driven by the actual feel of a project,” Talbot says. Noel also insisted on the use of authentic materials, from cast bronze for scuppers and ornate planters to handwrought iron for fences and hand-hewn stone for pavers—each individually crafted by talented artisans. Of course, this exacting approach required time as the inspired
TOP RIGHT: Designed by Fillmore and Talbot and engineered by Upwall Design Architects, the extraordinary pavilion features a central fireplace, suspended stone chimney and a fully equipped outdoor kitchen along its curved perimeter. “The Vallejos are all about gathering with family and food, and this space is the hub and heart of their home’s outdoor living,” Fillmore explains. BOTTOM RIGHT: Massive iron gates designed by Northland welcome visitors from the front yard into the lavish landscape behind the home. OPPOSITE: Fillmore and Talbot replaced an old pool with an elongated version sagely reoriented toward mountain vistas. The pool features intricately detailed bronze scuppers spouting water from below a broad stone platform at the pool’s far end, where swimmers jump from its edge.
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A. One of the landscape’s two hanging Dedon daybeds offers a private retreat.
B. Located in the bottom corner of the property, an intimate area boasts a graceful pergola and terraced water feature.
C. Terraced into a large lawn, semicircular seating forms an amphitheater for open-air gatherings and entertainment.
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D. Herb-lined paths lead to the orchard’s espaliered apple trees and rows of grape vines.
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E. Water spouts from a curved stone wall designed to partially enclose the fire pit patio and direct the eye to the mountains above.
H. The hot tub is oversized to host large groups of family and friends. Wide stone caps double as tables for those soaking in the tub.
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G. The pool features a broad sundeck at one end and, at the other, a jumping platform sits above ornate scuppers and a submerged viewing bench.
F. A tiled roof, thick stone columns and heavy beams shape the centrally located pavilion equipped with a professional-grade kitchen and centered fire feature.
“
There is a poetry to this project.” — Jeremy Fillmore
Homeowner Noel Vallejo had his sprawling property enclosed by a perimeter wall built from stones harvested from the land.
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landscape was sculpted into exactly what Noel and its creators imagined it to be—nine years to be exact. “Great design reveals itself over time, and this project reminded us about the rewards of being patient,” Fillmore says. As with many Tuscan gardens, this sloped landscape fully reveals itself only as you move through the property. It’s about exploring and discovering, with paths and steps that appear and disappear through a lavishly planted site punctuated by architecturally commanding structures, intriguing gardens and intimate retreats. “We wanted to create spaces that step with the land rather than being on one plane,” notes Talbot, who traveled to Tuscany to study its celebrated gardens and sweeping land-
scapes. His discoveries inspired many of the property’s plantings that he and Fillmore inserted, including lines of Taylor junipers mimicking age-old Italian cypress as well as commanding sycamores, smaller Japanese maples and hawthorns delivering canopies of shade and living sculpture to the dynamic landscape. To put the proverbial cherry on the cake, the duo signed on landscape designer Heidi Fischio-Brewer, whose blooming perennials, vibrant flowers and herbaceous plantings robustly fill bronze planters, top stone walls and garnish gardens in mass across the landscape. Centrally located, the main pool and expansive pavilion lead to an inviting fire pit patio below, seemingly transporting you to an old
MAKING A SPLASH Fillmore and Talbot’s drawing of a corbel-style scupper illustrates an intricately patterned design. Artisans used the sketch to shape and detail a life-sized clay model used to develop molds that formed the finished bronze scuppers integrated into the pool’s water feature. A patinated finish lends an aged look and feel to the water-spouting sculptures. A submerged, built-in bench invites swimmers to sit below the spilling water and granite platform above.
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A trail of stone steps leads through mounds of grasses and fragrant plantings to the pool, where water spills from handmade bronze scuppers into the large swimming pool below.
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GROUND RULES Homeowners Noel and Carrie Vallejo wanted their mountainside Eden to engage all of the senses, so every planting choice mattered. Garden designer Heidi Fischio-Brewer pulled out all the stops as she added an experiential, plant-softened layer to the property’s extraordinary landscape by Northland Design.
Heidi FischioBrewer, owner of Empress Garden Design
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Fischio-Brewer chose the climbing rose “Joseph’s Coat” to soften the natural stone pillars. “The roses bloom most of the summer and their beautiful flowers seem to glow in the sunset sky,” she says.
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Attracting buzzing bees and garden lovers alike, rose “Morden Sunrise” and lavender “Hidcote” add color and sweet fragrance to the small vineyard all summer long.
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“The container plantings are a nod to the Mediterranean and steer the feel of the landscape and architecture,” says Fischio-Brewer, who filled each with three butterfly bushes surrounded by layers of colorful, bee-attracting center plants and spillers. Nearby, potted star jasmine fills the summer air with its sweet perfume.
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A thickly planted bed of vegetables—including lettuces, tomatoes, peppers and herbs— delivers a delicious mix of texture, color and tastes to a path leading to the vineyard.
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Pennisetum “Little Bunny” fountain grass adds touchable texture and form to the swing area without attracting bees to this spot intended for hanging out and carefree lounging.
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Bright red mandevilla and trailing Supertunia “Silver Berry” deliver exuberant color to the top of a curved wall enclosing the firepit patio.
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Large stone steps lead from the large pavilion to an intimate lowergarden pergola and water feature designed specially for Carrie Vallejo. A single patinaed bronze scupper spills into a stepped, hewn Indiana limestone channel and a 500-year-old stone trough imported from England. Blankets of Apricot Drift roses soften the hardscape and deliver luxurious color and fragrance to the area.
European plaza. Further down the incline, a lawnset amphitheater opens to breathtaking views and a boxwood-edged, crushed-stone path that slopes down to an intimate timber pergola and water feature created especially for Carrie. It is now her favorite place to retreat in the gardens. On the opposite side of the property, a hot tub patio, tennis court and a children’s lawn and playhouse step above the centralized pool area. At every turn, surprises abound. Sparkling water spills from extravagantly decorated bronze scuppers and spouts designed by Talbot; inviting daybeds hang from
soaring arched posts, tight paths unexpectedly open to expansive lawns and exuberant blooms cascade from wall tops and elevated planters. “There is a poetry to this project,” Fillmore explains. “The different spaces evoke unique emotions but the whole thing tells a complete story.” And, like lines from an Italian sonnet, this landscape’s inspired elements provoke reflection, exhilaration, and even bewilderment and outright joy—emotions shared by the Vallejos and everyone with whom they generously share their piece of paradise.
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PHOTO LINDSAY SALAZAR
Homes
Designer Cara Fox delivers classic style and fresh details to the relaxed décor of a new Salt Lake City home, page 108.
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redux
RESPLENDENT In a posh Provo enclave, a team of talented pros reimagines an esteemed estate with masterful moves and fresh traditional style. BY BR A D M EE PHOTOS BY JOSH UA CALDW ELL A N D SAVA N NA H BUSW ELL
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PHOTOS: (LEFT) SAVANNAH BUSWELL; (RIGHT) JOSHUA CALDWELL
OPPOSITE: Architect Greg Tankersley worked with builder Jackson & LeRoy to calm the Provo home’s existing exterior, stripping away ornate elements and simplifying the front entry. Landscape architect Mike Kaiser rethought the front motor court and planted tall mature trees to further quiet the structure’s bold facade. Once weighed down by large columns and banisters, the renovated entry now boasts a sweeping staircase of refined railing and simple, white oak treads. Establish Design’s Elizabeth Wixom Johnsen and Kimberly Rasmussen transformed the space into a gallery displaying pieces from the owners’ art collection.
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The staircase’s graciously curved railing leads to a second-story landing, where Venetian-plastered walls and softly stained white-oak floors create a quiet backdrop for treasured art and select antiques. TOP RIGHT: The soft color scheme that flows throughout the house— like Johnsen and Rasmussen’s other design choices—is at once fresh and timeless. In the living room, new white oak panels lend a warm backdrop to a comforting palette of traditional furnishings dressed in light, informal fabrics. Wall panels located right of the fireplace open to concealed storage and display space. BOTTOM RIGHT: A beamed ceiling connects the dining and sitting room areas. Jackson & LeRoy installed the raw oak timbers to resemble the underside of a floor structure from below, Johnsen explains. The light fixtures are from The Urban Electric Company.
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PHOTOS: (LEFT & ABOVE) JOSHUA CALDWELL; (RIGHT) SAVANNAH BUSWELL
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When architect Greg Tankersley was asked to reimagine a decades-old Provo estate by its new owners, he recognized more than one challenge. The first was the clients’ decision to renovate the existing house rather than taking the simpler and less costly route of replacing it with a new build that better suited them and their lifestyle. “They wouldn’t dream of tearing it down because they knew how much the house means to the neighborhood,” says Tankersley, partner with McAlpine. “That speaks to how lovely these people are.” To renovate the property, the homeowners signed on Tankersley, as well as builder Jackson & LeRoy, landscape architect Mike Kaiser of Kaiser Trabue and designers Elizabeth Wixom Johnsen and Kimberly Rasmussen of Establish Design. This collaborative dream team instantly clicked with their clients, noting from the start that the dwelling’s grandiose persona was a major mismatch with the homeowners’ personalities. The property may be known by many as a landmark home
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PHOTOS: JOSHUA CALDWELL
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A cozy sitting room lies off the kitchen, where a TV is set into the end of its honed quartzite-topped island. Painted custom cabinets and a Dutch blue La Cornue range cheer the space, while ceilingmount porcelain fixtures “create the sparkle of the room,” Rasmussen says. Appliance doors conceal easy-to-access small appliances. OPPOSITE: A blue-gray ceiling and butter-yellow cabinets charm the butler’s pantry, where the backsplash’s wheat-colored tiles feature small hand-painted Dutch scenes. A Dutch door opens into the gardens.
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“This became the Downton Abbey room,” says Johnsen, describing the captivating mudroom created from a useless, undersized garage. “Mudrooms are often the ugliest rooms in the house, but I wanted to turn this one into the best mudroom in the world,” Tankersley says. Large arched windows fill the storage-rich space with light, making it an ideal spot for the homeowner to sew, craft and work on projects with her grandchildren. The marble floor is from Exquisite Surfaces.
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PHOTO JOSHUA CALDWELL
that was owned by a prominent Utah family, but “It was nothing like our clients in character,” Tankersley says. That presented the second challenge. “We had to reinvent the house more in their image,” Tankersley explains. Doing so meant taming the animated Cape Dutch-influenced exterior by redefining its entry, simplifying the facade, stripping away highly ornate elements and reducing the mix of window types to a single style. “The house has such a strong personality that we couldn’t really change it. Rather, we had to accept and calm it,” Tankersley says. As Johnsen puts it, “We put our arms around what was there.” The team had more latitude indoors, where they not only ditched the decor’s overwrought and overscaled elements but also completely rethought its spaces. “We opened up rooms, moved rooms around and totally ignored the existing floor plan,” Tankersley explains. A new heart-of-the-home kitchen, for example, replaced a stingy cooking space, an undersized garage transformed into a high-style mudroom, an upper patio became a children’s playroom and combined living and dining rooms emerged as a single salon overlooking beautifully renewed gardens and grounds. “Almost every decision we made was to create a home that would be beautiful, fun, interactive, relaxing, uplifting and welcoming for kids, grandkids, friends and neighbors,” says Brandon LeRoy, principal of Jackson & LeRoy. The designers masterfully tailored the interior to the owners’ tastes and lifestyle, pulling inspiration from many sources. Celebrating their clients’ love of art and travel, Johnsen and Rasmussen lined the walls of the newly reconfigured and refined entry with a soaring, floor-to-ceiling gallery of the homeowners’ impressive art collection. One painting depicting a Cape Dutch scene was recently acquired as a salute to the home’s existing Cape Dutch architectural gestures, including its facade’s shapely entry and elaborately scrolled corbels. Johnsen and Rasmussen took their lead from the painting as they fashioned a mix of informal fabrics, soft seaside colors, hand-painted Dutch tiles, European antiques and other curated elements that shape the light-infused interior’s
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ABOVE LEFT: A floor-to-ceiling window floods the primary bathroom with light and garden views. The nickle-plated bathtub sits in front of a shapely backdrop of Lueders limestone. ABOVE RIGHT: The spacious primary bathroom opens to the bedroom through a doorway handsomely crowned with a transom window. OPPOSITE: In the gardens, a brick wall’s arched opening frames views of a raised fountain and lush lawn beyond.
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Elizabeth Wixom Johnsen and Kimberly Rasmussen, principals of Establish Design
PHOTOS: (ABOVE AND RIGHT) JOSHUA CALDWELL; (PORTRAIT) SAVANNAH BUSWELL
freshly tailored, traditional décor. “The design nods to the historical, but is livable and informal,” Rasmussen says. Although art takes pride of place, the home delights with unexpected details, room to room. White oak panels, for example, clad the living room’s apse-like fireplace wall while butter-yellow walls and a Dutch door cheer the butler’s pantry. In the small powder room, palm leaf wallpaper dresses the under-stairs space, a checkered stone floor rouses the mudroom and generously paned windows frame glorious garden views throughout. “The team focused on preserving much of the history and worked delicately to enhance, shape and beautify not only the home, but also the spectacular landscape along the Provo River,” LeRoy explains. Linking the house with the riverside property presented yet another of the project’s notable challenges. “Architecture should have a dialogue with the land, and this house felt more like an object plopped onto the lot,” Tankersley says. “There was no conversation.” To establish discourse, he sent architecture out into the landscape, including
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ABOVE: Comfortable teak furnishings welcome family and friends into an under-roof living area overlooking limestone patios and the Hydrazzo-finished pool. OPPOSITE (CLOCKWISE FROM TOP): Behind the house, landscape architect Mike Kaiser placed a courtyard-like space that includes a swimming pool, cabana and outdoor living areas drawing visitors from the house into the landscape. A covered timber loggia extends from the main house to the pool-anchored courtyard area. Benches invite a respite with views to the lawns and gardens. A walkable nature path winds through the exquisitely landscaped property and around a pickleball court set into the broad lawn.
PHOTOS: (ABOVE) JOSHUA CALDWELL; (OPPOSITE TOP) SAVANNAH BUSWELL; (OPPOSITE BOTTOM) JOSHUA CALDWELL
new garages, that “put more chess pieces on the property.” He added a long, covered loggia connecting the main house with a spectacular courtyard imagined by Kaiser. There, a new pool, cabana and under-roof living spaces create a destination designed to satisfy the owners’ desire to live and entertain outdoors. “It’s amazing what Greg and Mike dreamed up,” Johnsen says. “They are a magical combination.” Taking his lead from Tankersley’s architecture, Kaiser reengineered the front motor court, where he planted tall, mature trees “to calm the house down and give it some scale and age,” he explains. Kaiser installed other hand-selected trees to deliver shade and screening across the previously open lot. “We tried to focus on uncomplicated spaces, dense hedges, masses of evergreens and rows of trees to simplify what you see.” To encourage exploration, Kaiser wove a walking path through and around the land’s sprawling lawns, handsome structures and orderly gardens. “The property naturally has a lot of hidden corners discovered with surprise,” he says. “Vital to the success of any project is to gather all the expertise and great talents up front,” LeRoy concludes. “This creates a beautiful symphony of creative minds working together.” Fortunately for the owners of this notable property, as well as the home itself, this collaborative team of masters pulled together everything needed to brilliantly renovate the resplendent estate.
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COOL GUISE
Behind the facade of a 1930s cottage, Jason Wilde surprises with a welcoming pool house decked out with fresh classic style and charming details galore. BY BRAD MEE PHOTOS BY LINDSAY SALAZAR
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A fanciful Chippendale gate, painted in Farrow & Ball’s Green Blue, charms the pool-area garden. OPPOSITE: Resembling an original 1930s Cape Cod cottage, the new pool house sits on a property adjacent to the owners’ large family home in Holladay. “We didn’t want to create the look of an imposing estate, so we designed the pool house with its own identity while linking it to the main home in subtle ways,” says interior designer Jason Wilde.
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Appearances can be deceiving. This certainly holds true for a new house built along a tree-shaded street in Holladay. Set on a narrow lot behind a curved gravel drive, the classically styled structure would leave few suspecting it is not a separate residence. “The owners wanted a pool house on the property beside their family home, so we decided to make it look like a separate house rather than part of an estate,” says interior designer Jason Wilde, who created exactly that for his long-term clients. Approachable and neighborhood-friendly, the understated, single-story house features a welcoming scale and classic detailing. Cedar shingles, stone chimneys and horizontal siding team with a hand-
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somely paneled, sheltered porch framed by symmetrically paired lanterns and potted boxwoods. “At first glance, it resembles a modest 1930s Cape Cod cottage,” says Wilde, who worked with Hyrum Bates on the architectural design. The only clue that it is indeed a pool house is the front door’s aqua hue, hinting at the sparkling water around which the L-shaped home was built. Offering a welcoming first impression, the front door opens directly into the light-filled, main living and gathering space. A separate side door leads into a richly decorated hallway providing direct access to the pool and patios, as well as changing rooms, full bathroom and broadly windowed exercise
OPPOSITE: A front door opens into a hallway leading to the pool and patios. Multiple hooks offer spots to hang towels and swimsuits. Beadboard provides a durable, scuff-friendly wall surface. A lantern ceiling light and fernpatterned wallpaper nod to the owners’ love of gardening and classic style. BELOW: The pool house interior was geared for year-round use, says Wilde, who designed it to feel as finely detailed and comfortable as the owners’ main home but more casual and carefree. Outdoor fabrics, limestone floors, beadboard-clad walls and stained cabinetry deliver durability and easy care to the décor. Paired ottomans serve as storage-rich coffee tables and a custom sofa opens into a bed, accommodating overnight guests.
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BELOW: Wilde replicated an English estate’s fireplace in the pool house and devised trim detail to frame a wall-mounted TV. OPPOSITE (CLOCKWISE FROM TOP LEFT): Inside the broad opening to the pool and patios, a chair covered in a Perennials performance fabric rests in front of draperies tailored from Lee Jofa’s Seacliff Mist. The dining table serves small get-togethers but can also expand with leaves to seat larger parties of 12. In the bathroom, a custom lattice mirror hangs above a vanity crafted to resemble a painted chest of drawers. A masterful mix of Walker Zanger tiles pairs with woven vinyl wallpaper by Phillip Jeffries in the bathroom and shower area. Gleaming hooks and fixtures perform like jewelry in the dressed-up space. “I’m a sucker for antique brass,” Wilde admits.
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room. Hallway doors offer entry to the spacious living area when desired. Wilde conjured a fresh, timeless style for the poolside retreat. “I wanted it to feel a little barn, a little Cape Cod, a little Hamptons,” he explains. To that end, beadboard and finely crafted beams adorn the cathedral ceiling soaring high above the interior’s gathering area. Wilde painted the ceiling’s beadboard a warm gray hue, providing a shadowy backdrop that accentuates the artistry of
hand-chiseled, white-painted beams and the delicate form of an ethereal chandelier. The designer clad the walls below with wider planked beadboard “to make it feel like the outside is coming in.” The limestone floors that flow inside and out add to the harmonizing effect. Once the backdrop was in place, Wilde turned to the décor. His goal was to create spaces as special and inviting as those in the main house, but less formal and more durable. “This may be a pool
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DETAIL DRIVEN Interior designer Jason Wilde piled on the details to conjure the pool house’s fresh traditional décor Classic styling and more-is-more decorating are hallmarks of Jason Wilde interiors. So too are period architectural details and a fearless interplay of fabrics and patterns. Oh, and don’t forget the wit and whimsy he weaves throughout. All played a part in making this pool house as special as any main residence the designer crafts.
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1. Pool house fabrics and wallpapers (left to right): Ferns by GP&J Baker, Seacliffe Print by Lee Jofa, Eastern Eden by Perennials, Ridley by Carlton V Ltd. 2. Wilde’s love for whimsy takes hold in the hallway, where he embellished with beadboard cutouts, fringed pillows and fanciful fern wallpaper.
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3. Hand-painted tile from Country Floors frames the fire box with color and petite patterns. 4. Wilde added long straps to custom seat cushions so that he could tie them with crosses rather than “too sweet” bows. 5. Metal shelves deliver a shot of Swedish style to a kitchen wall.
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Jason Wilde, principal of Harman Wilde Interior Design.
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house, but we didn’t want the quality of the design diminished in any way,” Wilde explains. In the main gathering space composed of open kitchen, dining and living areas, he mingled custom furnishings, European antiques and unexpected details. Rush-seated Irish keeping chairs surround a painted dining table, Swedish open shelves hang above the kitchen’s reeded cabinets and unmatched side tables team with relaxed seating upholstered in posh outdoor fabrics. “They’re as pretty as they are indestructible,” he says. Other elements of note include a stately William Morris-inspired fireplace specially designed to accommodate a TV, as well as a main bathroom fully dressed with ornate Walker Zanger tile, Phillip Jeffries wallpaper and a custom lattice mirror. “This interior is about the sum of its parts, not about any one wow moment or ‘that’ thing,” the designer explains. One of Wilde’s fortes is curating and layering lux fabrics, and this project proves no exception. Woven draperies with a Lee Jofa hand-blocked pattern frame the expansive opening to the pool, an assortment of patterned performance fabrics dress varied lounge chairs, and striped and floral patterned pillows—exquisitely detailed with trims and fringes—pile on the hall bench as well as the sleeper sofa dressed in a solid blue Thibaut weave. “A job worth doing is worth overdoing,” jests Wilde, who is fearless when it comes to piling on
To accommodate the most people possible, Wilde furnished the outdoor living area with a pair of woven sectionals and teak arm chairs. Soft-hued outdoor fabrics draw from the interior’s comforting color palette. The small table and chairs serves the nearby exercise room.
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the fabrics. “It’s all about how you ground and mix the patterns and scales,” he explains. And in this pool house, weight also matters. “The fabrics have a cotton and linen vibe, nothing heavy,” he says. The same holds true for his airy color palette of soft grays, calming blues and warm whites. “It’s like the grayed graduations of the sky.” That lighthearted, fully decorated approach continues outdoors, where under-the-stars gathering spaces and intimate destinations showcase the same attention to detail as their indoor counterparts. A solitary teak bench, six chaise lounges and assorted potted topiaries gather around the pool. Meanwhile, a large pergola extends from the win-
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dowed exercise room, shading a spacious, outdoor living area fully furnished with woven sectionals, cushioned teak arm chairs and ceramic garden stools. “You want to take the same approach to finishing outdoor spaces as you do with those indoors,” Wilde says. Nearby, a classically detailed Chippendale gate— painted the same green-blue hue as the front door— charms the manicured gardens. “I like the magic of things,” says Wilde, referencing the gate and everything else that enchants the one-of-a-kind pool house in unison. “I don’t want you to feel surprised because you stumbled on something special,” he adds. “I like everything to feel special.”
BELOW: The main gathering space, hallway and window-sided exercise room form the L-shaped pool house. A large pergola extends from the exercise-room wing, shading a posh outdoor living area overlooking the pool. Smaller dining and conversation areas sit on the patio immediately outside the interior’s gathering room. OPPOSITE (CLOCKWISE FORM TOP): Ceramic garden stools, lantern lights, paneled posts and a Chippendale gate are among the many elements Wilde used to cultivate the classic style of the outdoor living areas; Six woven Kingsley Bate chaises invite loungers to the far end of the pool. Wide-striped umbrellas deliver a classic summer pattern to the scene; Backed by a hedge of boxwood and painted brick wall, a simple teak bench overlooks the swimming pool.
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creative
HED Dek TKTK. BY BRAD MEE
The main hall performs like a welcoming, light-filled arcade formed by a series of arched doors, windows and interior openings. A herringbone-patterned tile floor anchors the space, while white oak beams and pendant lights by Feiss Lawler animate the ceiling above. The walls are painted Benjamin Moore’s White Dove. OPPOSITE: Soaring red rocks provide a dramatic backdrop for the Hurricane home melding elements of contemporary and Spanish Colonial architecture. Arched openings welcome visitors to the cool shade of a covered front porch and entry. The desert landscape mimics the surrounding terrain.
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PHOTOS BY SCOT ZIMMERMAN
ESCAPE PLAN
In southern Utah, a panoramic setting and a mix of Spanish colonial and contemporary styles inspire a family’s idyllic retreat. BY BR A D M EE PHOTOS BY LACEY AL EX A N DER
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We love our busy lives and the towns we call home, but sometimes we need an escape from it all. For Cahlan and Kim Sharp living in Orem, that retreat takes the form of their newly built house in Hurricane, located near Zion National Park in southern Utah. While planning their escape, the couple imagined a house that would open to the contours and colors of a red-rock landscape, take in its dazzling light and
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celebrate the expanse of its land. “We wanted something more remote than a typical neighborhood, a place where we could stretch our legs with room to roam and explore,” Kim says. The couple found exactly that with a 10-acre cliffside lot overlooking Hurricane Valley below. The Sharps also envisioned a home that “functions around us rather than the other way around,” Kim explains. In turn, Inouye Design created architectural plans
ABOVE: In the great room, white walls set off a mix of comfortable, earthtoned furnishings and arched, custom built-ins richly backed with stained oak. A bare oak mantle and a Calacatta Del Rey quartz hearth accentuate the large fireplace’s simple form. RIGHT: The arched form and vibrant colors of a 1700s Danish painting animate the main hallway.
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detailing a spacious great room and kitchen created to accommodate large, casual gatherings. There are six bedrooms with soundproofed closets that double as quiet sleeping quarters for babies. “We also located the kids’ areas at the opposite end of the house from the adult bedrooms,” Kim points out. Much of the two-story house opens to a large pool in back and most rooms boast broad doors and windows linking to the views and landscape. “Inouye brought it all together,” Kim says. The homeowners favored a clean-lined contemporary style, but they didn’t want anything cold or severe. Admirers of Spanish Colonial style, they borrowed many of its charming elements—arches, white walls, carved wooden doors and a red-tile roof—to deliver the welcoming comfort they craved. “I come from Spanish decent, and that side of my family is so warm and loving,” says Kim. “That is how I wanted the house to feel.” She shared this goal with Markay Johnson Construction and interior designer Camille Kenyon of Milley Design, who worked with the Sharps to create their dream getaway from the ground up. Once through the glass-and-steel arched front doors, visitors step into a long, lightfilled hallway framed by a wall of dramatically arched windows and doors on one side. On the other side, broadly arched interior openings reiterate the curved openings. “The architectural plans originally had squared-off windows, but we changed them during construction and added even more arches in the home to soften and warm its style,” says Kenyon. She called upon color, texture and comfortable furnishings to do the same. With nature as her muse, Kenyon pulled softened earth tones from the landscape to fashion
TOP LEFT: The kitchen’s prep island features an oak paneled base while the serving island boasts a waterfall design formed from Cascade quartzite. BOTTOM LEFT: A large wicker light delivers rich texture and a modern form to the dining room overlooking covered patios and the pool. OPPOSITE: A mix of painted and lightly stained oak cabinets crafted by Aspen Mill deliver warmth and character to the open kitchen. Double islands foster a functional, easy flowing floor plan and were individually designed for prepping and serving food. Sculptures by artist Kat Elliott add unexpected forms to a nearby sofa table.
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Art hangs above an antique jelly cabinet, creating a striking vignette in the hall outside a girl’s bedroom. OPPOSITE: “We wanted to play off the home’s arches,” says Kenyon, who paneled a girl’s bedroom with roundedtop wall panels painted with Benjamin Moore’s Light Mocha. A loosely knitted blanket and a nubby rug deliver high texture to the space.
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a color palette that helps calm and ground the white-walled rooms. Teaming with Calley Hullinger at Elements by Remedy, she introduced furnishings and materials in light terra cottas, creams and tans, as well as grays that help balance the warmer tones. That doesn’t mean Kenyon spurned dark colors entirely. Black window frames, charcoal-hued chests and ebony faucets are among curated elements adding bold juxtapositions. “The contrast pushes the design’s contemporary side,” she explains. To help bring the outdoors in, Kenyon chose light wood tones and repeated them liberally. “A lot of Spanish-style homes are filled with heavily carved, dark mahogany pieces, but we wanted something softer, more natural and contemporary,” the designer explains. She also infused subtle refer-
ABOVE: Milley Design’s Camille Kenyon dressed the bunk room’s walls and ceiling with wallpaper. She also mixed painted and whiteoak elements to foster a light and cozy ambiance. LEFT: Simple furnishings deliver a fresh finish to the bunk room. OPPOSITE: Boldly patterned tile animates the bunk room bathroom delightfully detailed with light wood and woven light fixtures.
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The two-story house overlooks Hurricane Valley and backs to redrock cliffs. The main hallway terminates with a broad, white-oak staircase featuring an iron railing and a wall of viewframing windows. The tranquil primary bedroom boasts white-oak beams, a tileclad fireplace and a large window overlooking the pool. Red rock forms the swimming pool’s water feature and diving platform. A sun shelf and hot tub are integrated into the design. The primary bathroom features a glass-walled shower and shapely free-standing tub.
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Camille Kenyon, principal of Milley Design
ences to the desert landscape through live plants, as well as woven and texture-rich elements: the dining room’s domed wicker light, a guest room’s cane-paneled bed and leather-strapped benches, boldly knitted throws and nubby rugs recurring throughout. “We mostly relied on texture rather than pattern for visual interest and an organic vibe,” the designer says. When pattern makes a play, it’s on select accessories, wallpapers and hand-painted bathroom tiles. Even the herringbone lay of the main hallway’s tiled floor and the kitchen and baths’ stacked-tile backsplashes deliver subtle pattern to the home’s décor. Not everything in the house is new and novel. In the main hallway, a religious Danish painting from the 1700s delivers a large arched form and lively colors to the décor. An old pew, found by the Sharps and Kenyon while antiquing in Texas, sits across the hall from a gallery wall of collected art. And at the hallway’s end, a gothic jelly cabinet from the 1800s creates an intriguing focal point. Even the kitchen’s aged cutting boards and wash bowl convey time-worn character. “I love working with old, antique pieces,” Kenyon says. “They add soul and history to a home, and they help ground its décor.” In the end, the home became the dream getaway the homeowners had hoped for. “Some nights, we’ll sit by the pool and just gaze at the stars. It is so dark, quiet and peaceful,” Kim says. At that time, there are no thoughts of the everyday life they flee. “We have a chaotic lifestyle at home, and for us, this house is our perfect escape.”
The Sharps and Kenyon found the hallway’s antique pew while attending The Round Top Antiques Fair in Texas. A Kat Elliott sculpture delivers a striking contemporary form.
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Starting FRESH
In Salt Lake City’s historic Harvard Yale neighborhood, Tom and Cara Fox combine traditional style with 21st-century ease and elegance for a young family’s new home. BY BR A D M EE INTERIOR PHOTOS BY LI N DSAY SALAZA R E X TERIOR PHOTOS BY SCOTT DAV IS
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“We’re big on entrances,” Tom Fox explains. He and his wife Cara dressed the foyer with classic paneling, a herringbonepatterned oak floor and a handsome staircase. “We created tapered balusters and paired them with white-oak newel posts for a simple, elegant feel,” says Cara, standing on the step. OPPOSITE: A cedar-shingled gambrel roof and a row of dormers give the two story house an English cottage revival style befitting its historic Harvard Yale neighborhood. Design/ build by The Fox Group; landscape by Emily Brooks Wayment.
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Timeless is a word interior designer Cara Fox uses often to describe the houses she and husband Tom—principals of The Fox Group—design and build for clients who crave classic style. The owners of this new residence in Salt Lake’s gracious Harvard Yale neighborhood are among them. “They wanted to live in a walkable, historic neighborhood, but they didn’t want to live in an old house,” Cara says. She and Tom responded by creating an inviting English cottage-style home that complements the neighborhood’s period revival style while providing the space and livability their clients needed for their young, active family.
ABOVE: Art by Paige Anderson inspired the music room’s décor. “The room is super sophisticated and a little overdone,” says Cara, who chose brass accents, silk draperies and a velvet sofa to accentuate the opulence set by the room’s rich navy-teal color. “We wanted this to be a ‘wow’ moment off the foyer.” LEFT: A Dutch door welcomes guests into the home. “Harvard Yale is a gracious walking neighborhood, and this door fosters friendliness while still providing a sense of privacy,” Cara says. OPPOSITE: Visual Comfort Dumfries lanterns hang above the entry, where white oak floors deliver a classic pattern to the welcoming space. A peek into the color-saturated music room delivers a shot of drama and signals the beginning of harmonizing blue tones that run throughout the home.
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Tailored gardens wrap the two-story house, with its cedarshingled gambrel roof and multiple dormers conveying stature and age-old character. Meanwhile, white-painted brick—tumbled and set with overflowing mortar—and subtle asymmetry deliver a sense of ease to the traditional facade. “The owners wanted a sense of casual elegance, and that begins at the curb,” Cara explains. The exterior provides more than a hint of the character and charm waiting within its brick walls.
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Inside, the home is unmistakably traditional but ardently free of any clichéd décor elements of yesteryear. There are no dark tapestries, heavily carved furnishings or fussy frills. Instead, relaxed textiles, soft colors, natural finishes and spirited details deliver a sense of comfort and freshness throughout. Just inside the front Dutch door, brass lanterns hang high above the entry’s herringbone-patterned floor and staircase, both crafted from natural white oak. “They add an airy feeling and tell you right away that while this is a traditional home, it’s light and
ABOVE: Open to the kitchen, the family room offers atease style and an abundance of custom seating pieces for the active family. The chandelier is by Currey & Company, the lounge chairs’ block-print floral fabric is from Lisa Fine Textiles and the art is by Claire Tollstrup; all available through The Fox Shop. TOP RIGHT: A painting by local artist Ryan Cannon hangs in the family room. BOTTOM RIGHT: The family room opens into the spacious kitchen. Light wood tones and shades of blue and white help decoratively unite the adjoining spaces.
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Beadboard, beams and detailed trim work deliver character to the kitchen ceiling. Custom built-in cabinetry and a simple range hood promote the room’s timeless style. The brass-accented lanterns are from Hudson Valley Lighting. LEFT: Natural white oak plays against white paint and tile to accentuate the open shelves, cubbies and classic molding of a built-in display wall.
livable,” Cara says. White paneled walls and a crisply tailored bench suggest the same. A glimpse into the nearby music room, dramatically dressed headto-toe in dark teal, signals you’re in for a surprise or two. It also reveals a strong penchant for blue. Indeed, varied shades of blue perform as a decorative thread that ties the rooms together. Cornflower-hued ginger jars gather in the family room, cobalt glassware fills shelves in the kitchen and a lively mix of pillows, Roman shades and seating pieces running throughout the home are tailored and trimmed in a range of refreshing blues, often teamed with white. “They create such a light,
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summertime feel,” says Cara, who introduced striped fabrics to do the same. “Our clients wanted the look to be elegant yet casual, and stripes deliver both.” The designer added block-printed florals and plenty of tranquil solids to balance the linear stripes. Nearly all of the fabrics are finished to be no-fuss and family friendly. “They had to be hold up to the active family,” Cara explains. The centrally situated family room—a welcoming space with handsomely paneled walls, an abundance of windows and a finely trimmed fireplace—connects to the open kitchen and back deck, creating a busy and beloved gathering space. “We think the spaces used the most should be the most special,” Tom explains. To create a sense of comfort and conviviality, Cara was deliberate about incorporating lots of seating in the family room and, at her clients’ request, she nixed the ubiquitous TV mounted over the fireplace. “They wanted this space to be all about gathering and bonding,” she explains. Instead, a painting by Claire Tollstrup hangs above the mantle, portraying a dreamy garden scene that furthers the room’s fresh-picked style. In the adjoining kitchen, striped barstools pull up to the long island top with Calacatta Gold marble. Above, beadboard and beams lend character to the ceiling, while builtin cabinets with glass mullion doors “make everything feel open and more custom than basic shelves would,” Cara says. The range hood is intentionally simple and elegant— ”not too fussy,” she adds. While the design is soothingly cohesive, unexpected elements pepper the décor with color and character. A lattice patterned ceiling—crafted of white oak—crowns the dining
TOP LEFT: Vertically shiplapped walls and a checkerboard-patterned floor of honed Carrara and Bardiglio marbles animate the mudroom hall. White-oak cabinets boast a natural matte finish and decorative locker cutouts and brass-mesh drawer fronts. The white light fixture is by Aerin Lauder for Visual Comfort. BOTTOM LEFT: Cara hangs a Moravian Star light fixture in nearly every project, as she did here in the powder room. “It reminds me of a 3D compass that always leads you back home,” she says. OPPOSITE: Custom built-in cabinets—designed with glass mullion doors and natural oak interiors—frame the entry into the light-filled dining room. A jaw-dropping lattice-patterned beam ceiling nods to a similar motif gracing the high-back chairs below. The Alberto chandelier is designed by Julie Neill for Visual Comfort.
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We think the spaces used the most should be the most special.” — Tom Fox S U M M E R 2 0 2 2 | U TA H S T Y L E A N D D E S I G N
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STRIPE IT RICH Inspired by the home’s casual style and simple elegance, Cara Fox curated a lineup of striped fabrics that prove this timehonored pattern has a place in any space.
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Narrow stripes detail the primary bathroom’s Roman shade with a simple, clean-lined pattern that balances the tub’s curvy shape and the floor’s intricate hexpatterned tile.
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Broad blue-and-white stripes dress the primary bedroom’s end-of-bed bench, adding a bold pattern that counters the more refined lines of the canopy bed frame.
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In the front yard, a trio of Adirondack chairs are accented with striped outdoor pillows. They are the first of many striped elements that give decorative continuity to the home, indoors and out.
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The playful teaming of striped pillows and a mini-checked coverlet lends an easygoing vibe to the boys’ bedroom.
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The entry’s custom bench is dressed in a simple Green House striped fabric delightfully paired with fringed pillows in a Schumacher Elton check.
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room and mimics the chair backs below. An exuberant pairing of striped and floral patterns in shades of red and mint frolic in the girls’ bedroom, where dormers carve out cubbies for benches and storage-rich built-ins. And in the mudroom, large black and white marble squares create an iconic checkerboard patterned floor fronting built-in lockers and an inviting window seat. ”It’s one of may favorite spots in the house,” Cara exclaims. Truth be told, details in every room foster the home’s fresh traditional style and invite lingering and lounging. “We knew this would be a house filled with kids and life,” Cara says. “It had to be as fun as it is functional, as lovely as it is livable.”
Tom and Cara Fox, principals of The Fox Group.
ABOVE: A striped Ikat patterned fabric animates the Roman shades, pillows and window seat in the girls’ bedroom. “The Schumacher fabric adds a pop of color and modern flair to the all-floral room,” Cara explains.
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T H E C H A R L E ST O N D R A P E R E V E N I N G
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Dinner Monday – Saturday 5pm – 10pm
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Brunch Saturday– Sunday 10am – 2pm
Summer hours may vary 1229 Pioneer Rd, Draper
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Reser vations 801.550.9348
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www.thechar lestondraper.com
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It is always with great excitement that we welcome you and summer to The Charleston Draper. Enjoy a cool cocktail on our newly extended Italian patios as birds' chip in the hundred-year-old trees and toads croak to the rhythm to the night. Stroll through our new English herb garden while you relish in the long summer nights – and did I mention the food! - Chef Marco Silva
CRAVINGS
FIRED UP Ryan Crafts has a simple formula for elevating the season’s freshpicked flavor: Utah peaches + hot grill = summertime bliss BY DON SKY PECK
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For a fleeting period during late summer and early fall, fresh peaches reign as Utah’s most coveted crop. For Ryan Crafts, that means it’s time to get fired up. As the grill master for catering powerhouse Culinary Crafts, he is always looking for tasty ways to serve from the flames—and peaches offer bushels of inspiration. “Peaches love the grill and can be served in both sweet and savory ways,” Crafts explains. What’s more, guests love eating local and in-season, as well as experiencing unexpected takes on the season’s most eagerly anticipated crop. Crafts takes us to the grill and fires up dishes that celebrate the versatility and vivacious flavor of Utah peaches. Things are going to get hot!
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PICKING POINTER “You don’t want an overripe peach for grilling,” Crafts insists. Instead, he purposefully chooses slightly underripe peaches when playing with fire. “They hold together better on the grill and will become just as tender and sweet as ripe fruit once they’re grilled.”
Sweet And Savory Not Just For Dessert “Grilled peaches are really versatile and can be introduced into the menu at most any stage, savory or sweet,” Crafts says. Culinary Crafts often teams grilled peaches with meat and fish for a easy and surprising pairing. “A simple grilled peach makes an excellent summertime side dish for virtually any entree,” he adds. His team also combines diced grilled peaches, sweet onions, cilantro and a hit of lime juice to make a seasonal salsa “that is particularly tasty served over grilled fish or chicken.” Crafts also uses cooled grilled peaches to amp up summertime salads, and he pairs grilled peaches with tomatoes (sliced similarly), serving them caprese style with burrata, olive oil and herb toppings like basil or mint. For those with a sweet tooth, Crafts’ team often crowns grilled peach halves with a number of delectable toppings, including gelato, heavy cream, whipped cream, mascarpone and
ON THE ROAD
whipped ricotta sweetened with a little honey. To add dimension, they frequently garnish these with caramel and a little sea salt or Red Rock pistachios. “There’s really no end to the things you can create with grilled peaches,” Crafts says.
AS EASY AS PIE Ryan Crafts’ five steps for grilling peaches 1 Heat your grill to a medium-high to high range. 2 Half your peaches lengthwise, pit them, then brush the cut side with salted butter. 3 Place your buttered peaches cut side down on the grill for two to three minutes, or until they can be lifted without sticking. If they stick, grill them a little longer. 4 Flip the peaches over to their skin sides down and reduce the heat. If you’re using a wood fire, just move them to the side away from active flames. 5 Finish grilling the peaches more slowly on the skin side. Don’t brown the skin—just let the peach halves heat through and soften a few minutes more.
CRAFTS’ TOP TIPS •D on’t move or turn the peaches on the grill too early or they will stick and shred. If they don’t lift easily, they need more time to sear. Once a crust forms on the fruit, they will naturally release. • If your peaches are burning before they release, your grill is too hot. • Live-wood fires elevate the peaches’ flavor, but a gas grill makes grilling them easier because the heat is easier to control. • Grilled peaches are naturally sweet and don’t usually require sugar or honey. If you desire more sweetness, don’t add sugar or honey to peaches before grilling. Added sugar will caramelize faster than the fruit and may burn before your peaches are completely cooked. You can add either honey or sugar after grilling for a sweeter flavor, although a quick drizzle of maple syrup is even better.
Peach season is hailed across Utah at several festivals, some more than 100 years old. Whether you want to attend a celebration or simply take a scenic drive to honor the harvest and buy a bushel (or two), don't dawdle. Peach season comes and goes much too fast.
BRIGHAM CITY PEACH DAYS Peach Days started in 1904 as a day-off from the harvest and time to celebrate “an abundance of the best peaches in Utah.” They are observed during the first weekend after Labor Day every year (Sept. 7-10, 2022). boxelderchamber.com
UTAH’S FAMOUS FRUIT WAY On a 10-mile stretch of Old Highway 89 between Perry and Willard, established fruit stands sell freshly harvested peaches from late July to early October. boxelderchamber.com
HURRICANE CITY PEACH DAYS
Ryan Crafts, Culinary Crafts’ president and grill master
First celebrated in 1909, Peach Days is a long-standing Hurricane tradition. Nostalgic and focused on the heritage of the peach harvest in Southern Utah, this year’s festival will occur from Sept. 1-3. cityofhurricane.com
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DESIGN DIRECTORY Builders/Contractors/ Construction
Curate To The Trade
San Francisco Design
360 S. Rio Grande St., Salt Lake City 801-618-0216 curatetothetrade.com
Salt Lake City
Bartile 725 N. 1000 West, Centerville Toll Free 1-800-933-5038 In Utah 1-801-295-3443 bartile.com
Park City Eldredge Furniture + Interior Design 4750 S. 900 East, Salt Lake City 801-261-1414 eldredgefurniture.com
Brandon Bodell Construction 686 Stokes Ave., Draper 801-301-3290 brandonbodellconstruction.com
Forsey’s Fine Furniture + Interior Design
Ezra Lee Design + Build
2977 S. Highland Dr., Salt Lake City 801-487-0777
363 S. Main St,, Ste. 100, Alpine 801-448-6876 ezralee.com
Traditional & Contemporary
Craftsman House 2955 S. Highland Dr., Salt Lake City 801-463-0777 forseys.com
Jackson & LeRoy 4980 S. Highland Dr., Salt Lake City 801-277-3927 jacksonandleroy.com
Helm 5253 S. State St., Murray 801-263-1292 helmhome.com
Jaffa Group 4490 N. Forestdale Dr,, Ste. 202, Park City 435-615-6873 jaffagroup.com
Ivy Interiors 3174 S. Highland Dr., Salt Lake City 801-486-2257 ivyinteriorsslc.com
Furnishings Adib’s Rug Gallery 3092 S. Highland Dr., Salt Lake City 801-484-6364 adibs.com
Cosy House 904 W. 1600 South, St. George 435-922-6490 becosyhouse.com
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The Black Goose Design 7652 Holden St., Midvale 801-562-1933 theblackgoosedesign.com
The Fox Group 2290 E. Murray Holladay Rd., Holladay 801-671-8090 thefoxgroup.com
The Garden Store 678 S. 700 East, Salt Lake City 801-595-6622 thegardenstoresaltlake.com
Home Accessories/ Art/Jewelry Cosy House
Leisure Living Inc. 2208 S. 900 East, Salt Lake City 801-487-3289 leisurelivinginc.com
La Petite Maison
The Fox Group 2290 E. Murray Holladay Rd., Holladay 801-671-8090 thefoxgroup.com
1890 Bonanza Dr. 435-645-7072 sanfrandesign.com
904 W. 1600 South, St. George 435-922-6490 becosyhouse.com
Living Home Construction 2019 S. Main St,, Salt Lake City 801-455-1369 living-home.net
2970 S. Highland Dr. 801-467-2701
Osmond Designs
Orem 1660 N. State St. 801-225-2555
Lehi 151 E. State St. 801-766-6448 osmonddesigns.com
Parkway Avenue Design and Mercantile 1265 Draper Pkwy., Draper 801-987-8164 parkwayavenuedesign.com
915 E. 12600 South, Draper lpmantiques@gmail.com shoplpma.com
Modern West Fine Art 412 S. 700 West, Salt Lake City 801-355-3383 modernwestfineart.com
O.C. Tanner Jewelers
Salt Lake City 15 S. State St. 801-532-3222
Park City 416 Main St. 435-940-9470 octannerjewelers.com
Southam Gallery 152 S. Main St., Salt Lake City 801-712-5170 southamgallery.com
Interior Design AMB Design 4680 S. Kelly Circle, Salt Lake City 801-272-8680 annemariebarton.com
Eldredge Furniture + Interior Design 4750 S. 900 East, Salt Lake City 801-261-1414 eldredgefurniture.com
Forsey’s Fine Furniture + Interior Design
Traditional & Contemporary 2977 S. Highland Dr., Salt Lake City 801-487-0777
3910 S. Highland Dr., Millcreek 801-274-2720 krockedesign.com
Craftsman House
Kimberly Parker Design
2955 S. Highland Dr., Salt Lake City 801-463-0777 forseys.com
801-505-1235 kimberlyparkerdesign.com
LMK Interior Design Hüga Home Design 2279 Santa Clara Dr., Santa Clara 435-429-0957 hugahomedesign.com
4626 S. Highland Dr., Salt Lake City 801-272-9121 lmkinteriordesign.com
Osmond Designs Ivy Interiors 3174 S. Highland Dr., Salt Lake City 801-486-2257 ivyinteriorsslc.com
Ezra Lee Design + Build 363 S. Main Street, Ste. 100, Alpine 801-448-6876 ezralee.com
K. Rocke Design/Glass House
Jaffa Group 4490 N. Forestdale Dr., Ste. 202, Park City 435-615-6873 jaffagroup.com
Orem 1660 N. State St. 801-225-2555
Lehi 151 E. State St. 801-766-6448 osmonddesigns.com
STRIPE IT RICH Looking for a simple way to amp up your outdoor style? Think stripes. Thick or thin, bold or bashful, this classic pattern always looks fresh and fun.
Left to right: Crete, Palma and Capri from Link; South Beach Stripe from Mokum; Morning Glory and Five Stripe from Link. To the trade, johnbrooksinc.com
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Parkway Avenue Design and Mercantile 1265 Draper Pkwy., Draper 801-987-8164 parkwayavenuedesign.com
The Fox Group 2290 E. Murray Holladay Rd., Holladay 801-671-8090 thefoxgroup.com
Red Ledges
European Marble & Granite
205 N. Red Ledges Blvd., Heber City 877-733-5334 redledges.com
South Salt Lake
Park City Summit | Sotheby’s International Realty
Salt Lake City 1260 E. Stringham Ave., Ste. 100 801-467-2100
Draper
Kitchen/Bath
13693 S. 200 West, Ste. 100 801-467-2100
Park City 84060 MLD
Salt Lake City 2345 S. Main St. 801-466-0990
Provo 50 E. 500 South 801-932-0027
Boise, ID 627 N. Dupont Ave., Ste. 102 208-258-2479
Ketchum, ID 491 S. 10th St. 208-576-3643
Jackson, WY 485 W. Broadway 307-200-3313 mld.com
Peppertree Kitchen & Bath 7940 S. 1300 West, West Jordan 801-565-1654 peppertreekitchen.com
2575 S. 600 West 801-974-0333 6622 N. Landmark Dr. Ste. B160 435-214-7445 europeanmarbleandgranite.com
Inside Out Architecturals 3412 S. 300 West Ste. A, Salt Lake City 801-487-3274 insideoutarchitecturals.com
545 Main St. 435-649-1884
Metro Tile Corp
625 Main St. 435-649-1884
189 W. Gregson Ave., Salt Lake City 801-433-0168 metrotileutah.com
7580 Royal St., Mont Cervin Plaza #105 435-649-1884 1835 Three Kings Dr., Unit 70 435-649-1884
The Stone Collection
Park City 84098
2179 S. Commerce Center Dr., Ste. 500, West Valley City 801-875-4460 thestonecollection.com
7085 Glenwild Dr. 435-649-1884
Venetian Tile & Stone
1750 Park Ave. 435-649-1884
Heber City 362 N. Main St. 435-649-1884
825 W. 2400 South, Salt Lake City 801-977-8888 venetianstonegallery.com
St. George 151 N. Main St. 435-649-1884
Moab 59 E. Center St. 435-649-1884 summitsothebysrealty.com
Windows/Doors/ Window Coverings Park City Blind & Design
Stone/Tile
1612 Ute Blvd., Ste. 109A, Park City 435-649-9665 parkcityblind.com
CR Stoneworld
ShadeCo
Salt Lake City
Lighting
2680 S. 1600 West, Mapleton 801-860-7625 crstoneworld.com
Hammerton
Contempo Tile | Crossville Studios
217 Wright Brothers Dr., Salt Lake City 801-973-8095 hammerton.com
Salt Lake City
Roth Living 1400 S. Foothill Dr., Ste. 212 Salt Lake City 801-582-5552 rothliving.com
1511 E. 2100 South 385-479-9191
Midway
3711 S. 300 West 801-262-1717
Salt Lake City - Slab Gallery
Real Estate/Developments EXP Realty PO Box 150250, Ogden 385-316-6286 ut.exprealty.com
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2885 S. 300 West 801-433-1717
American Fork 938 S. 500 East 801-426-8686 crossvillestudios.com
260 E. Main St. 385-479-9191 ext. 168 myshadeco.com
Style Source Productions 731 N. 1340 West, Orem 801-427-4439 stylesourceproductions.com
SOURCES STYLE FILE PAGE 35 EDITOR’S PICK
Curate to the Trade, SLC, curatetothetrade.com; Currey & Company, curreyandcompany.com
Eschenfelder Landscaping, Park City and SLC, eschenfelderlandscaping.com; Doran Taylor Inc., SLC, dorantaylor.com; Brighton Architectural Group, Park City, brightonarchitecturalgroup.com; Michele Dunker, Logan, micheledunkerdesign.com
PAGE 36 MOST WANTED
Cosy House, St. George, becosyhouse.com; Curate to the Trade, SLC, curatetothetrade. com; Crate & Barrel, Murray, crateandbarrel. com; LMK Interior Design, SLC, lmkinteriordesign.com; O.C. Tanner Jewelers, SLC, octannerjewelers.com; Osmond Designs, Lehi and Orem, osmonddesigns.com; Serena & Lily, serenaandlily.com; The Black Goose Design, Midvale, theblackgoosedesign.com; The Garden Store, SLC, thegardenstoresaltlake.com
LAND OF ENCHANTMENT
PAGE 38 MEET THE MAKER
PAGES 74-85
The Moody Cactus, SLC, themoodycactus.com
Photographer: Joshua Caldwell, joshuacaldwell.com; Savannah Buswell, savvy.photo; Greg Tankersley, McAlpine, New York City, N.Y., mcalpinehouse.com; Elizabeth Wixom Johnsen and Kimberly Rasmussen, Establish Design, SLC, establishdesign.com; Brandon LeRoy, Jackson & LeRoy, SLC, jacksonandleroy.com; Mike Kaiser, Kaiser Trabue, Nashville, Tenn, kaisertrabue.com
PAGE 42 SWATCH WATCH
John Brooks Inc., SLC, johnbrooksinc.com PAGE 44 FLOWER CLASS
Every Blooming Thing, SLC, new.everybloomingthing.cc
OUTDOOR LIVING GARDEN VARIETY PAGES 46-50
Red Butte Garden, SLC, redbuttegarden.org; Red Hills Desert Garden, St. George, redhillsdesertgarden.com; Ogden Nature Center, Ogden, ogdennaturecenter.org
UNDER COVER PAGES 52-57
The Fox Group, Holladay, thefoxgroup.com; Jackson & LeRoy, SLC, jacksonandleroy.com; Clayton Vance Architecture, Heber City, claytonvance.com; Northland Design, American Fork, northland-design.com; Outdoor Elements, Taylorsville, outdoorelementsdesign.com; Ward & Child Design, SLC, 801-859-4781; Markay Johnson Construction, Sandy, mjconstruction.com; Rob McQuay, McQuay Architects, St. George, mcquayarchitects.com;
PAGES 60-69
Photographer: Joshua Caldwell, joshuacaldwell.com; Northland Design, American Fork, northlanddesign.com; Upwall Design Architects, SLC, upwalldesign.com; Empress Garden Design, SLC, @empressgardendesign
RESPENDENT REDUX
COOL GUISE PAGES 86-95
Photographer: Lindsay Salazar, lindsaysalazar. com; Design: Jason Wilde, Harman Wilde Interior Design, SLC, harmanwilde.com; Architectural Design: Hyrum Bates, Hyrum McKay Bates Design, Inc., Kaysville, 801-5998434; Builder: Lance Howell, Biltmore Construction, Holladay, 801-201-6263 Landscape Design: Kent Topham, Richard Picot, The Picot Company West, SLC, 801-6525095; Pool: Geddes Custom Pools, SLC, geddescustompools.com; Finish Carpenter: Kevin Fitt, Fitt Construction, Sandy, 801-4507200; Cabinetry: Tyler Perry, Forever Furniture, West Jordan, foreverfurnitureinc.com
ESCAPE PLAN PAGES 96-107
Photographer: Lacey Alexander, laceyalexander.com; Interior Design: Camille Kenyon, Milley Design, Lehi, milleydesign. com; Architectural Plan Design: Inouye Design, Orem, inouyedesign.com; Builder: Markay Johnson Construction, Sandy, mjconstruction.com; Landscape Design: Custom 5 Landscape, St. George, 435-879-1178; Cabinets: Aspen Mill, St. George, 435-6689486; Furnishings: Camille Kenyon, Milley Design, Lehi, milleydesign.com with Calley Hullinger, Elements by Remedy, Springville, elementsbyremedy.com
STARTING FRESH PAGES 108-119
Photographer: Lindsay Salazar, lindsaysalazar. com; exteriors: Scott Davis, scott-davis-photo.com Design, Build and Interior Design: Tom and Cara Fox, The Fox Group, Holladay, thefoxgroup.com; Landscape Design: Emily Brooks Wayment, EBW Design, SLC, gardenbyemily.com; Cabinetry: Ryan Reeder, Reeder Cabinets, Brigham City, ryanreedercabinets.com; Furniture, lighting, art and accessories available through The Fox Shop, Holladay, thefoxshop.co PAGE 128 NOW TRENDING
ROUND AND ROUND RL Wyman Design + Create, St. George, rlwyman.com; House West Design, housewestdesign.com; Anderson Custom Homes, St. George, andersoncustomhomesinc. com; Allison Campbell Design, allisoncampbelldesign.com; Markay Johnson Construction, Sandy, mjconstruction.com; Milley Design, Lehi, milleydesign.com; Slate Ridge Homes, Washington, slateridgehomes. com; Nest Style & Design, South Jordan, neststyleanddesign.com; Lacey Alexander, laceyalexander.com; Utah Valley Videos, utahvalleyvideos.com 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 2022, 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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ROUND AND ROUND 4 desert spaces make the rounds with eye-catching curve and circles. ROUNDED FORMS, curved lines and high-flying circles take the edge off angular architecture in St. George homes. 1. A large, back-lit round mirror is partially eclipsed above a squared-off vanity. RL Wyman Design + Create and House West Design. 2. A large ring embellishes an entry’s custom glass door while a contemporary, halo-like light hangs above. Anderson Custom Homes and Allison Campbell Design. 3. Clusters of layered, lighted rings hang above a rectangular dining table below. Slate Ridge Homes and Nest Style & Design. 4. Metal arcs shape a woven-backed bed in a bedroom with a round-topped doorway. Markay Johnson Construction and Milley Design.
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PHOTOS COURTESY OF: (IMAGE 4) LACEY ALEXANDER; (IMAGES 1,2,3)
NOW TRENDING
Nestled on 2,000 acres neighboring Park City, Utah, Red Ledges was designed for better living. Red Ledges Construction invites you to discover luxurious living spaces and exceptional architecture within a vibrant and engaging community. Mother nature created the natural beauty. We make it easy to create your custom home here.
New Homes from $1.2M-$10M+ | On-Site Design Studio | Scan QR Code to View Available Properties ObtainthePropertyReportrequiredbyFederallawandreaditbeforesigninganything.TheCaliforniaDepartmentofRealEstate has not inspected, examined, qualified this offering. No Federal agency has judged the merits or value, if any, of this property. All recreational facilities are privately owned and operated as a club with mandatory membership fees. This does not constitute an offer to sell or a solicitation of an offer to buy in Ohio or in any other jurisdiction in which registration or any other legal requirements have not been fulfilled. © 2022 Red Ledges Land Development, Inc. ©2022 BHH Affiliates, LLC. An independently owned and operated franchisee of BHH Affiliates, LLC. Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices and the Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices symbol are registered service marks of Columbia Insurance Company, a Berkshire Hathaway affiliate. Equal Housing Opportunity.