Kitchen of the Week: A 1960s Los Angeles Ranch Home Gets a Modern, Earthy Glow-up

This 1961 ranch-style home in Mandeville Canyon, Los Angeles, was last renovated in the 1990s and, unfortunately, that makeover left much to be desired: “heavy chocolate laminate floors, partition glass, sandstone veneer on the walls/fireplaces,” says architect Patrick Bernatz, of the offending interventions. “Can lighting everywhere!” Brought on to update the home, Bernatz came up […]

An Interior for Introverts: Adding Peace and Quiet to a 1910 Westchester House

Maleeha and Ian and their two daughters decamped from Brooklyn to Westchester County, just north of the city, for familiar reasons. In need of breathing room, the family—she’s a UX designer, he’s a doctor—settled on a 1910 Mediterranean-style fixer-upper in Pelham, New York, with an elegant terracotta-tiled roof and lots of windows. They took the […]

Revolution Road: An Architect-Designed Compound in Shanghai

Confession: We’ve been hesitant at Remodelista to delve into the design scene in China; it’s unknown territory for us. But we’ve been quietly bookmarking projects that speak to us (and make us want to get on a plane). First up: a compelling whitewashed brick compound in Shanghai by KUU Architects, a design practice run by […]

Kitchen of the Week: An Award-Winning Project with a Heart of Darkness

Our love for light-filled, airy interiors is well-documented, but every once in a while, we encounter moody, sexy spaces that tempt us to the dark side—like this culinary lair from deVOL designed for a couple who live in Petersham, a small village on the Thames, not far from London. The owners wanted a space that […]

Steal This Look: A Yellow-Accented Kitchen in Copenhagen

This week we’re revisiting some of our favorite all-time summer stories, like this one: Here’s a dose of sunshine, courtesy of Danish kitchen designers Reform. Outfitted in oak veneer, stainless steel, and a gradient of yellow to ochre tile, the minimalist look is one to co-opt. Here, we profile the essential items to recreate it, […]

An Ode to Rural Life: A Low-Impact Family Home in Surrey by Rural Office

In the Great Austens conservation area in the market town of Farnham in Surrey, England, Ben and Claire Macland were looking to replace an old interwar bungalow located on a corner plot. The bungalow was poorly constructed with an even poorer energy rating. They called on Rural Office, an architecture firm based in Carmarthen, Wales […]

At Home with C. S. Valentin: French Eclecticism in Cobble Hill, Brooklyn

French designer C. S. Valentin’s home base is in Cobble Hill, Brooklyn, but he splits his time among clients in New York, Mexico, and Los Angeles. His NYC outpost—a rental in a prewar building—is more like a test kitchen than a full-time residence. Valentin calls it a “mid-mod wunderkammer” (cabinet of curiosities). “It’s a collage […]

10 Easy Pieces: Kids’ Modern Beds

The kids’ furniture market has grown–and grown up, fortunately. Here are our choices for simple, functional, and well-designed twin beds (not just reserved for the under-twelve set). Above: The Crate & Barrel Hampshire Olive Green Arched Bed is on sale for $109.65 to $594.15 depending on size. Above: The upholstered Twin Ella Bed comes in […]

Kitchen of the Week: A New Kitchen Designed to Harmonize with a Vintage Pantry

The house came with sun-washed rooms, original windows and wainscotting—and a recent history of being nearly condemned. What made Jacque Ivory and her husband, Chris, want to move in was a backroom relic: a preserved walk-in pantry with floor-to-ceiling fir shelves and cabinets. “It felt like a miracle that nobody had every painted all that […]

10 Things Nobody Tells You About Painting Kitchen Cabinets

Ready to make a change in your kitchen, without the expense and hassle of sourcing and installing all-new everything? A new coat of paint on kitchen cabinets, when done well, can completely change the look of your kitchen—on a minimal budget. (If you need proof, just see 6 Kitchen Cabinets Transformed with Paint.) Ready to […]

Mathilde: Minimalist Linen Quilts, Made in Rhode Island

Quilts—particularly of the vintage American variety—are having a moment, as Margot noted back in February (see Trend Alert: The Great American Patchwork Quilt Comeback). As it turns out, it’s not just antique versions that are having a resurgence: The quilt is also getting a minimalist, modern makeover for the 2021 era. Or so we’ve come […]

Kitchens of the Week: 5 Retrouvius Designs Starring Scrap Materials, Creative Salvage Edition

“Our work is underpinned by a philosophy of reuse,” writes London designer Maria Speake. “Materiality is part of the fun of life in our studio—we always try to incorporate reclaimed materials and demonstrate how old and rejected materials are still relevant.” Speake’s castoffs come from Retrouvius, the combination salvage business and interior design office she […]

Sleep Well: 5 Bedding Sales to Shop This Week

How’s your sleep these days? If you’re anything like us, getting into bed is the best part of the day. Sleep is finally getting its due as an essential component of good health, not a luxury or a mark of laziness. Case in point: This week is the National Sleep Foundation’s Sleep Awareness Week, and […]

Kitchen of the Week: A State-of-the-Art Kitchen System from Finland

Emerging Finnish design company Kitzen specializes in kitchen systems that offer, as its founders like to say, “the ideal conditions for cooking.” And, we might add, for keeping clutter out of sight. Kitzen’s look is modern and seamless: Its fully made kitchens use top-of-the-line materials and appliances (by Miele and Gaggenau) and don’t skimp on the storage. Kitzen customizes […]

Best Amateur-Designed Bedroom Space: Anne S. Holtermann

The winner of the Remodelista Considered Design Awards Best Amateur-Designed Bedroom is Anne S. Holtermann of South Dartmouth, Massachusetts. Holtermann’s project was chosen as a finalist by guest judge Gael Towey, who said that she likes “the overall summery feeling of the room–the tile floor and bright informal accessories, and the large windows that let in lots […]

5 Strategies for Covering 50 Windows—for Under a Million Dollars

Curtains can go very, very wrong. If you go overboard, you end up with something heavy and expensive and claustrophobic, like one of those getups Sally Field wore in Lincoln. On the other hand, don’t ignore them until too late, after all the remodel money has been spent. Like I did. With my husband threatening […]

Portrait of an Artist: A Photographer’s Soulful Cottage in Rural Germany

Berlin-based artist Anne Schwalbe was studying photography at the Ostkreuzschule school when a class trip brought her to a 1,000-year-old village along the river Elbe in Sachsen-Anhalt between Berlin and Hamburg. Anne, who takes photographs of nature, fell in love with the village, and a decade later, bought a small cottage (970 square feet) with […]

Kitchen of the Week: An English Glasshouse Addition with a deVol Kitchen for an Aesthete and a Chef

Hannah and Michael Holloway decamped from London for Bath shortly before their now three-and-a-half-year-old daughter was born. The city is known for its regal, historic townhouses, but the couple decided against vertical living in favor of a Regency-era artisan’s cottage with a generous garden in the village-y enclave of Larkhall. Built of the region’s signature […]

The Woodhouse Lodge: Designer Megan Pflug’s Catskills Motor Lodge Makeover

The Woodhouse Lodge dates to 1962 when the Catskills were the Borscht Belt (aka the Jewish Alps). Unlike so many neighboring resorts that went belly up decades ago, this modest joint—a welcoming A-frame with wings—carried on. But it had seen far better days when New York interior designer Megan Pflug and her artist husband, J. […]

Best Professionally Designed Bedroom: Hyde Evans Design

The winner of the Remodelista Considered Design Awards Best Professionally Designed Bedroom Space is Hyde Evans Design of Seattle. The firm’s project was chosen as a finalist by Remodelista editor in chief Julie Carlson, who said, “This aerie corner retreat overlooking the sea manages to channel a nautical vibe without veering into twee territory; I like […]

7 Favorites: Fair-Trade Bedcovers

We stand by the concept of fair-trade goods, but the products often leave something to be desired design-wise. Here’s a trove of fair-trade bed covers that retain the spirit of the place in which they were made, but also look at home just about anywhere.  Above: New York designers Roman & Williams use a Temoayan […]

The DIY Dishwasher-Disguising Door Panel, via The Merrythought

Disguising appliances behind cabinet panels is a unifying trick, one that we often feature in our Kitchen of the Week. But integrated appliances are pricier than their traditional counterparts and they don’t always come in the desired sizes. We were happy to see that the creative thinkers behind the website The Merrythought have come up […]

Concrete Chic: The Line Hotel in LA’s Koreatown

Set in a stripped-down 1960s Hyatt in LA’s buzzing Koreatown, the now debuting Line Hotel–from the owner of New York’s NoMad–takes a refreshingly raw approach to the architectural makeover. Hotel impresario Andrew Zobler of the Sydell Group let loose an impressive creative team, including It Boy chef Roy Choi and LA designer Sean Knibb, to […]

Where to Sleep (and Shop) in Antwerp

Situated in the Antwerp fashion district, just a street away from the Mode Museum, Sleep in the City is a trio of “shopping apartments” available for short-term rentals. Owners Bert Verschueren and Vincent Defontainers have created stylish interiors using a collection of vintage furniture painted matte black against a backdrop of pure white walls and […]

Kitchen of the Week: A Statement Backsplash in a Grand Green London Kitchen

What room would you be willing to sacrifice to create your dream kitchen? For Emmanuelle and David Cadji-Newby, it was clear their dining area, with its original moldings and garden views, ought to be turned into the hub of the house. The couple—she’s a psychotherapist in training, he’s a founder of personalized kids’ books publisher […]

The Ethical Kitchen Project: A Machine for Cooking

Why are contemporary kitchens so big? Danish designer Tobias Tí¸stesen poses this question on behalf of the environment, as well as our quality of life: “Do we really need all those one-purpose machines that then require big kitchens with a lot of space?” Tí¸stesen thinks not, and to prove it, he designed the Ethical Kitchen, a prototype […]

Kitchen of the Week: A Pastel Kitchen Inspired by Swedish Artist Carl Larsson

Founded in early 2020 by Mia and Marcus Sahlin, the owners of high-end kitchen company Kitchen & Beyond, Cupboards & Goods is a more affordable line of handmade preassembled cabinetry for the kitchen. Based in Gothenburg, in the tiny village of Hyssna, located on Sweden’s west coast, Cupboards & Goods recently worked with the family trust […]

One for All: TBo Updates A Brooklyn Townhouse for Multigenerational Family Living

The family wanted to stay together—literally. Bretaigne Walliser and Thom Dalmas’s clients asked the architects to reconfigure an 1899 Brooklyn townhouse for three generations—grandparents and their daughter, her wife, and their two children—to cohabitate and have space for creative pursuits. Thom and Bretaigne run TBo, one of our favorite NYC design studios: see A One-Room […]

Sleep Disrupters: 14 Upstart Mattress Companies

Every entrenched industry is getting a dose of disruption these days. And as fans of the little guy, we’re all for it. Perhaps the biggest industry to see some shakeup is the $14 billion American mattress trade—and it couldn’t happen to a better brute. News articles in recent years have shone a light on the […]

Seeing in Technicolor: 10 Color-Stained Kitchens That Swap Paint for Pigment

Noticed recently, with increasing frequency: kitchens where color-stained wood does more with less. Tinted linseed oils and pigment-rich Polyx-oils offer a tactile alternative to lacquered gloss or flat paint—allowing tone, grain, and texture to coexist. It’s a resourceful move: cost-conscious, low-VOC, and richly expressive. The result is a custom look without the custom price tag. […]