San Francisco Decorator Showcase 2024: See Every Room Inside of the Gilded Age Estate


For his stylish study, Jay Jeffers worked with Willem Racké Studio to develop a decorative ceiling treatment that looked as though it was actual marquetry inlay. And in a vestibule connecting her primary bedroom and bathroom, Sindu Peruri of Peruri Design Company offered a nod to the Palace of Fine Arts—which can be seen from windows in both spaces—by copper-leafing its rotunda-style ceiling.

Glossy surfaces weren’t solely relegated to ceilings, but extended to walls, custom cabinetry, and furnishings. In her “Jewel Box Kitchen,” Kristen Peña of K Interiors engaged TBC Plaster Artisans to give her walls a sumptuous shine with a high-gloss Venetian plaster using Benjamin Moore’s Townsend Harbor Brown. In the grand foyer, Nancy Evars bathed the walls in a shiny shade of aubergine from Little Greene Paint. Just a few feet away, in the “Verdant” grand hallway, Lauren Berry matched a lacquered Arabesque console table from Randolph & Hein with her high-gloss blue-green walls.

Upstairs in a guest bedroom dubbed “To the Dark and the Endless Skies: A Bedroom Retreat,” Robbie McMillan and Marcus Keller of AubreyMaxwell created a custom semigloss green Sherwin Williams color that helped illuminate the otherwise brooding room. And, in her reception space, Triggs enlisted Willem Racké Studio to create the high-gloss Venetian plaster walls—in a moody, layered blue—to evoke some serious drama. “I’d been to the [Mark] Rothko exhibition in Paris and had the idea to create a space, with a similar depth of field found in his work, that begins to unfold as you stand in the room.”

A focus on bespoke lighting seemed to flip the switch on minimalist styling in a shift toward more opulence and abstract design. For her bathroom, Mill Valley–based designer Holly A. Kopman worked with artist Bobby Sarnoff and Dogfork Lamp Arts to develop a custom chandelier in homage to a Mazzega-designed lighting fixture she’d been obsessed with. “I thought this would be the perfect place for it,” she says of the water-jet-cut and baked-glass fixture made of interlocking C-shapes they’ve been prototyping for the last year.

In the grand hallway, Berry selected a sculptural light installation called “Sand & Sea–Cascading Waves” from London-based design studio Haberdashery. For the primary bedroom, Peruri selected a curvaceous Selene pendant lamp by Elsa Foulon to drop from the center of the space. And in the “Vaulted Jewel” bathroom off the main kitchen, Stephanie Marsh Fillbrandt of Marsh & Clark Design selected an antique patinated brass leaf chandelier to hang in contrast to the bright white subway tiles.

The number of creative opportunities afforded by such a grand Gilded Age property are almost too numerous to count, but through the generous sponsorship of Da Vinci Marble, Monogram/GE, PACE/Premium Bath and Kitchen, Hakwood, Abbey Carpet of San Francisco, Waterworks, and Sherwin-Williams, among many others, the home—currently on the market with Compass for an eye-popping $32 million—is filled to the rafters with innovative and thoughtful design ideas that transcend aesthetics to help make a tangible difference in the lives of local youth. Benefitting the San Francisco University High School Financial Aid Program, the monthlong event has raised over $18 million throughout its history to provide hundreds of deserving Bay Area students with world-class college preparatory education.

Step inside of the San Francisco Decorator Showcase 2024

“A Threshold of Welcome” salon by Tineke Triggs

Christopher Stark



Source link

About The Author

Scroll to Top