The designer created a wallpaper line focused on gestural, hand-drawn imagery to produce unique surface designs that enhance spaces. The couple moved to a 1934 French Normandy-style townhouse in Los Angeles, drawn by its Art Deco aesthetics and distinct details. The home features functional spaces, merging a dining room and library, facilitating daily use and conversation during gatherings. They embrace a flexible design philosophy, asserting that their aesthetic choices naturally coincide, supporting creativity in their living environment.
Those interests combined as a passion for designing dynamic, large-scale installations, which inspired me to create my wallpaper line. The goal, from the very beginning, was to produce gestural, hand-drawn imagery and, in turn, produce unique surface designs that convey the nuance of the drawings throughout a space.
This house was built in 1934, and it has an unmistakable Art Deco, Old Hollywood style. I immediately fell in love with the original tile work, ornate fireplace, corbels, and other one-of-a-kind details.
I think a dining room and a library are a natural combination. For us, our dining room was the only room in the house with walls to spare, so it was a perfect locale for vertical book casing.
Design-wise, if we like it, it goes together, and that's never proved untrue.
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