
"The life of a fashion designer isn't exactly housebound. Between runway shows located around the world and the work of actually designing, it wouldn't be surprising if a creative director's own residential abode became an afterthought. But, of course, designers are people who care deeply about color, texture, and aesthetics writ large, so drab interiors would never do. Below, we've selected 11 of our favorite homes that belong to fashion designers-each of which showcases its owner's unique aesthetic sensibility."
"Designer Jerry Lorenzo doesn't much care for outré gestures, theatrical poses, and arch style statements redolent of novelty. Fear of God, the wildly popular global fashion brand he launched in 2013, upended stale caricatures of streetwear by infusing the category with a kind of subtle sophistication and quiet luxury attuned to the rhythms and rituals of 21st-century living. Mies van der Rohe famously opined that "God is in the details"; the same holds true for Fear of God."
"At the Beverly Hills home that Lorenzo (full name Jerry Lorenzo Manuel) shares with his wife, Desiree Manuel, and their three children, the refined design DNA that animates Fear of God comes to life at environmental scale, echoing the clothing line's hushed color palette, fine tailoring, and privileging of line, shape, and texture over graphic patterns and obstreperous effects. Like the man himself, the house speaks of quality sotto voce."
Eleven homes owned by fashion designers demonstrate how clothing sensibilities shape residential interiors. Designers balance global professional lives with carefully curated domestic spaces that emphasize color, texture, and tailoring. Many interiors favor restrained palettes, fine materials, and attention to line and form rather than loud patterns or novelty. Jerry Lorenzo's Beverly Hills residence embodies Fear of God's quiet luxury through muted colors, fine tailoring influences, and prioritization of shape and texture. Collaborative work with established designers and firms helps translate brand DNA into environmental scale, producing spaces that feel both timeless and contemporary.
Read at Architectural Digest
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