Our Work
Every project starts with a conversation and ends with a space, or an experience that feels unmistakably like you. Below is our first featured case study: a complete home transformation in Old Chatham, New York. Same bones. Completely different home.
The Chatham Reimagination
This home had great bones and no point of view. Beautiful hardwood floors, soaring ceilings, generous rooms, but a palette and furniture that hadn't been touched in 20 years. We reimagined the entire main floor: dining room, living room, entry foyer, kitchen, sunroom, and primary bedroom. No full gut renovation. No contractor drama. Just intentional design decisions made room by room; each one building toward a home that finally felt like the people who live in it.
BEFORE — Gold & burgundy walls, brass chandelier, floral chairs
AFTER — Dining room; second angle
The brief: A formal dining room frozen in 1995; two-tone gold and burgundy walls, floral chairs, brass chandelier that the homeowner had stopped using entirely.
What we did: Stripped the dated two-tone paint, introduced a warm, sophisticated taupe, replaced the brass chandelier with a sculptural modern globe fixture, swapped floral chairs for cane and upholstered seating, added bold contemporary art, and brought the existing ceiling medallion back to life with the right light anchoring it.
The result: A room the family and guests actually want to eat in, and the first thing guests talk about when they walk in.
BEFORE — Yellow walls, bare sofa, frames leaning on couch
The Dining Room
BEFORE — Orange walls, ceiling fan, no furniture styling
The Entry Foyer & Living Room
AFTER — Black door, layered living room, fireplace bookshelf art
The brief: An entry and living room with yellow walls, mismatched furniture, and no sense of arrival.
What we did: Painted everything crisp white, introduced a dramatic matte black front door, built an entry moment with a sculptural foyer table, dried floral arrangement, and art bust. In the living room: layered textures, curated art placement, mixed seating, and a bookshelf art piece above the fireplace that becomes a conversation starter every time.
The result: A home that makes a statement the moment you open the door.
The Primary Bedroom
The brief: A vaulted primary bedroom with orange walls, a ceiling fan doing all the work, and no sense of intention.
What we did: Painted the room crisp white to let the architecture breathe, installed a dramatic storm cloud mural that follows the vaulted ceiling all the way to its peak, added brass swing-arm sconces, curated a seating moment with a camel barrel chair and stacked ottoman, and dressed the black French doors with woven shades that tie the whole palette together.
The result: A room that feels like checking into somewhere extraordinary every single night.
The Sunroom
AFTER — Cloud mural, brass sconces, camel chair, woven shades
BEFORE — Old patio furniture, raw cedar porch, no warmth
BEFORE — Honey-oak cabinets, dated fixtures
Whether you have one room that's been bothering you for years or a whole home that needs a point of view, we'd love to talk. The first conversation is free.
AFTER — Taupe walls, globe chandelier, cane chairs, bold art
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AFTER — Entry foyer — black door, floral arrangement, art bust
AFTER — Primary bedroom — wide angle showing full layout
AFTER — Plaid sofas, layered throws, chandelier, styled coffee table
The brief: An underused screened porch with plastic patio furniture and raw cedar that read like an afterthought.
What we did: Kept the beautiful wood ceiling, brought in plaid sofas, layered throws and pillows, added hanging plants, styled the coffee table, and installed a modern chandelier that makes the space feel finished from every angle.
The result: The room everyone ends up in.
The Kitchen
AFTER — Painted cabinets, new pendant, fixtures, curated counters, rug
The brief: Honey-oak cabinets, dark and dated, that felt stuck in 2005.
What we did: Cabinet paint refresh in warm sage-cream, swapped the pendant for a warm black industrial fixture, changed the fixtures, curated the countertop vignettes, and anchored the space with a bold geometric rug.
The result: Same footprint. Completely different kitchen.