Utah Style & Design Winter 2021

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CREATE YOUR

Dream Space MOD

MOUNTAIN HOMES FRONT & CENTER

KITCHENS

INSPIRING ROOMS

DIGITAL STARS

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When you're here, you don’t have to choose between nature and amenities. Or between good neighbors and a great location. Because when you’re here, you’re home.

©2020 BHH Affiliates, LLC. An independently owned and operated franchisee of BHH Affiliates, LLC. Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices and the Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices symbol are registered service marks of Columbia Insurance Company, a Berkshire Hathaway affiliate. Equal Housing Opportunity.



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PHOTO LINDSAY SALAZAR

WINTER 2021 | VOLUME 25 | NUMBER 1

70

40 ON THE COVER COVER IMAGE BY SCOT ZIMMERMAN

Designer Kristin Rocke creates a fresh spin on modern mountain living.

SHOW OFF BY BRAD MEE PHOTOS BY REBEKAH WESTOVER

In a new Alpine kitchen, Chad and Rochelle Broadhead put a pretty entertaining space out front, saving its more practical elements for an out-ofsight scullery.

48 FOR THE FUN OF IT BY BRAD MEE

PHOTOS BY MELISSA KELSEY

Designer Stephanie Hunt revives a Deer Valley home with an exuberant mix of colors, patterns and surprising details— and the result is a family’s upbeat mountain getaway.

58 A CLEAR VISION BY BRAD MEE

PHOTOS BY SCOT ZIMMERMAN

backdrop for a spectacular Park City sanctuary that celebrates its natural mountain surroundings.

70 DEVINE INSPIRATION BY BRAD MEE

PHOTOS BY LINDSAY SALAZAR

In South Jordan, social media stars Brad and Hailey Devine create a personalized family home inspired by travel, family history and a love of laid-back, culturally-driven design.

82 IN GRAND STYLE BY BRAD MEE

PHOTOS BY REBEKAH WESTOVER

On a pastoral site in Salem, Marissa and John Pope create their stately family house, injecting modern touches while remaining true to the home’s classic spirit.

Breathtaking vistas offer an inspiring

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CONTENTS |

WINTER 2021

DEPARTMENTS 34

REMODEL

MAKING CHANGE BY JOSH PETERSEN PHOTOS BY REBEKAH WESTOVER

Photographer Rebekah Westover and a team of pros transformed her home’s tired rooms into a showcase of dazzling details and savvy space solutions.

95

DINING IN & OUT

THE BIG O BY MARY BROWN MALOUF

This forever-favorite winter citrus brightens our taste buds all year long.

99

DESIGN DIRECTORY A resourceful guide of materials, places and products.

102 SOURCES A listing of this issue’s people, places and products.

104 SEEING SPOTS DECORATING

If you’re on the hunt for a daring way to animate your décor, consider today’s animal prints.

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style file EDITOR’S PICK NOW TRENDING BEHIND THE BRUSH DISH SHOP TALK MAKING ARRANGEMENTS ON THE TOWN

21 22 24 26 28 30 32

Find more design inspiration at utahstyleanddesign.com

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L M K interior design

4626 S. Highland Drive - SLC, UT 84117 - 801.272.9121 - Palm Springs, CA - 760.325.2959 @lmkinteriordesign www.lmkinteriordesign.com


THE TEAM

PUBLISHER

ART DIRECTOR

WEB EDITOR/SOCIAL MANAGER

Margaret Mary Shuff

Jeanine Miller

Josh Petersen

EDITOR-IN-CHIEF

GRAPHIC DESIGNER

DIRECTOR OF SALES

Brad Mee

Scott Peterson

Cori Davis

ASSISTANT EDITORS

PHOTOGRAPHY CONTRIBUTORS

ACCOUNT EXECUTIVES

EDITOR-IN-CHIEF

Josh Petersen Maddie Poole

Melissa Kelsey Lindsay Salazar Rebekah Westover Scot Zimmerman

Janette Erickson Ashley Hebrew Kristin McGary Denyse Davis Scott Haley

Marie Speed

FOOD EDITOR

Mary Brown Malouf

PRODUCTION MANAGER

PRESIDENT & PUBLISHER

Margaret Mary Shuff

CONTROLLER

Jeanne Greenberg PUBLISHERS OF

Salt Lake magazine Utah Bride & Groom Utah Style & Design Boca Raton magazine Worth Avenue magazine Mizner’s Dream Delray Beach magazine Florida Style & Design

Arianna Jimenez

515 S. 700 East, Suite 3-i, Salt Lake City, UT 84102 Phone

/ 801-485-5100

Fax

/ 801-485-5133

Email

/ magazine@utahstyleanddesign.com

Website

/ utahstyleanddesign.com

SILENT NIGHT

featuring represented artists of Modern West | december 1 — january 2

Patrick Dean Hubbell

Dick Jemison

412 S 700 W SLC, UT 84104 | modernwestfineart.com | 801.355.3383

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Shalee Cooper



EDITOR’S NOTE

So, Here’s an Idea

Follow me on Instagram @mrbradmee

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Conventional wisdom tells us that to create a lovely room, start with a favorite fabric or rug. That’s a textbook tactic. But after years chatting up talented designers, stylesetters and creative homeowners—as well as experiencing their exciting projects—I contend that truly special spaces begin with an idea. That’s the approach social superstars Brad and Hailey Devine took when they decided to create a new home in South Jordan (page 70). The young couple wanted their digs to celebrate and reflect their family heritage. That idea prompted journeys to England, Chile and Norway. At each scenic stop, they gathered one idea after another that helped guide the design of their dream home, documented on their YouTube series “Making a House a Home.” The couple’s idea cup ranneth over. As John Steinbeck penned, “Ideas are like rabbits. You get a couple, learn how to handle them, and pretty soon you have a dozen.” The Devines’ adventures confirmed this, and today, the family is surrounded by decorative details and cherished keepsakes that make their

rooms as personal as they are posh. Fortunately, there are many places to gather design ideas that don’t require extended travel and trekking abroad, although few promise to be as exciting and memorable. Closer-tohome sources include design darlings Pinterest and Instagram, as well as countless decorating programs, websites and podcasts. Then there are my personal favorites—design magazines like the one you’re holding now. When we pull an issue together, we search for projects and products that are not only spectacular, but also brimming with stirring and creative ideas—yours for the taking. The goal isn’t to clone someone else’s space (where’s the fun in that?), but rather to find and finesse ideas that help you create a space that’s uniquely yours.

BRAD MEE, EDITOR IN CHIEF



Design | Furnishings | accessories | Gifts

1265 E. Draper Parkway, Draper, Utah 84020 | Parkwayavenuedesign.com | Follow us @parkwayavenuedesign


style file WINTER | 2021

PHOTO COURTESY OF PALECEK

MAKING LIGHT OF NATURE A love of nature continues to illuminate many of today’s most fascinating light fixtures, including these branching brass sconces. As timely as they are timeless, their forms present a modern take on freshly cut eucalyptus while a luminous matte finish and tailored shades nod to the traditional. Eucalyptus Brass Shaded Sconces by Palecek, $448 each, The Garden Store, SLC, @thegardenstoresaltlake

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style file |

ON TREND Harlequin’s Irradiant velvet jacquard from Style Library, to the trade, John Brooks Inc., SLC, johnbrooksinc.com

1

2

3

8

LOOKING SHARP

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Piercing angles and fractured forms make a point with decisively edgy fixtures, furnishings and fabrics. 7

5

6

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1. Glace 3-Light Multi-Drop Pendant by Currey & Company, to the trade, Curate to the Trade, SLC, curatetothetrade.com 2. Meridian Cube Table by Bernhardt, $2,132, Helm, Murray, helmhome.com 3. Spirit Vase by Baccarat, $1,850, O.C. Tanner Jewelers, SLC, octannerjewelers.com 4. Cosmic Cork wallcoverings by Phillip Jeffries, to the trade, phillipjeffries.com 5. Ori Medium Linear Chandelier by Kelly Wearstler, $2,609, kellywearstler.com 6. Truss Square End Table, $499, Osmond Designs, Orem and Lehi, osmonddesigns.com 7. Reflection Console by Baker, $17,997, LMK Interior Design, SLC, lmkinteriordesign.com 8. Giza Steel Side Table, $803, Glass House, SLC, glasshouseslc.com


3910 S. HIGHLAND DRIVE SLC, UT, 84124 801.274.2720 WWW.KROCKEDESIGN.COM @KROCKEDESIGN @GLASSHOUSESLC

GET INSPIRED INTERIORS FOR A WELL LIVED LIFE IDEAS. DETAILS. RESULTS.


style file |

BEHIND THE BRUSH

DRAW THE CURTAINS Rebecca Reeve’s photographs radically reframe iconic Utah landscapes.

Rebecca Reeve’s “Marjory’s World #52,” shown at Julie Nester Gallery, Park City, julienestergallery.com

on its final journey,” she explains. The curtains, which Reeve bought at Goodwill and Salvation Army stores, represent a literal social fabric connecting humans with the land from which they come. The theme resonates in a time when human connection feels more tenuous than ever. “Making my work is a soulful endeavor. The curtains serve as portals into the landscape, yes, but also into ourselves,” Reeve says. “I hope that they inspire, especially now with the pandemic, some peace and some grounding.”

rebeccareeve.com / @rebeccareeve.studio

INSPIRED PALETTE

Aegean Teal 2136-40 Benjamin Moore

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Chantilly Lace OC-65 Benjamin Moore

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Borrowed Light No. 235 Farrow & Ball

Nocturne Blue HDC-CL-28 Behr

Dynamic Blue SW 6859 Sherwin-Williams

Rhythmic Blue SW 6806 Sherwin-Williams

STORY BY JOSH PETERSEN; PORTRAIT BY CHRISTOPHER ROSALES

The land seems to go on forever, a sea of endless white with no beginning or end. Two billowing cloths frame the scene, like curtains opening to an empty stage. Against the otherworldly beauty of the Bonneville Salt Flats, a brilliant blue sky feels both familiar and tethered to an unspoiled slice of the natural world, completely removed from the everyday. Artist Rebecca Reeve’s wistful, haunting photographs depict some of Utah’s most starkly beautiful landscapes in surprising new contexts. Her series “Marjory’s World,” named after the writer and conservationist Marjory Stoneman Douglas, began in Everglades National Park before moving West. “I wanted to work in a topography that was quite different, an environment that was as close as possible to the notion I had in my mind of a heavenly place, somewhere white and expansive and ethereal,” she says. The photos’ unique framing draws on a 17th century Dutch tradition in which family members mourning a deceased loved one would cover mirrors and artwork in their home with cloth. “It was believed this would make it easier for the soul to leave the body and subdue any temptations for it to stay in this world



style file |

DISH

FEEL YOUR OATS Oatmeal is one of winter’s simplest and coziest breakfast foods. It can also be one of the most exciting. Utah’s Hell’s Backbone Grill describes its oatmeal as a dreamy, creamy, steamy bowl that can make the rest of your day dreamy as well. Can you say the same about yours? If not, let’s talk toppings. Whether you cook rolled or steel-cut oats (or instant oats as a last resort or if you’re camping), adventurous add-ons can make all the difference. Part of the delight of oatmeal is its versatility, so experiment with fun and flavorful toppings. Here are a few ideas to get you started.

Crunch Properly cooked oatmeal should have a gentle chew, like well-cooked pasta. What it doesn't have is crunch, so add some texture. • Toast some nuts (any nuts, or a mixture) in a skillet until they just brown. Toss them in a mixture of cinnamon sugar and sprinkle them over your hot oats. • Toast coconut and sprinkle over the oatmeal with some chopped, dried pineapple. • Top with toasted peanuts and add a few dollops of your favorite jelly.

Sweet Sometimes, you gotta have sweet in the morning. Of course, there's maple syrup or brown sugar. You know that. But how about these? • Maple sugar. It has a more intense flavor than the syrup.

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• Chocolate chips. Yes, chocolate chips—milk, dark or even white. Drop them into hot oatmeal and let them melt as you eat. • Sweetened fruit. Slice strawberries the night before, sprinkle them with sugar so they get juicy, and top your bowl of oats. Any berry is good with oatmeal, but you don't need to pre-sweeten raspberries, blackberries or blueberries. Just sprinkle them with sugar as you fix your bowl.

Umami Maybe you want heftier protein in the morning? No problem. • Top your oatmeal with cooked, crumbled bacon. • Slide a poached or fried egg on top and garnish it with sliced avocado. • Add some slivered smoked salmon and dollops of softened cream cheese.

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LIQUID ASSETS Experiment with the cooking liquid. For example, add a dash of vanilla if you’re planning on sweet. Or pour in some vegetable stock if you’re planning on savory. If you cook with water, add a dash of salt. In any case, add a pat of butter as soon as the oatmeal is done to enrich its texture.



style file |

SHOP TALK

DRESSED FOR SUCCESS

“Right now, we’re focused on filling people’s homes with happiness and joy,” says Beth Ann Shepherd, principal of Dressed Design. As a designer, Shepherd has brought her idiosyncratic style to the homes of high-profile clients across the country. Now, she is sharing her fresh, joyful design approach with Dressed Design’s new retail location in the heart of Park City. The store, located on Main Street, lures guests with a welcoming veranda and an Instagram-ready hall of mirrors. Shepherd lovingly calls Dressed Design a menagerie and a rabbit hole. “Everyone’s first response is always the same word: wow,” she says. Shepherd initially planned to open the shop in February 2020, right as COVID-19 began to ravage the U.S. While she was initially distraught about delaying the opening, Shepherd turned a global-pandemicsized lemon into lemonade. She was inspired to debut with an eclectic mix of products to create the perfect weekend at home filled with music, family and entertainment. “This would be an entirely different place if we had not been locked down,” she says. Now, along with custom furniture, Dressed carries vintage Les Paul guitars, whimsical pieces from local artists and old-school board games, including a Monopoly set made of glass, gold and crystal. “Dressed Design went from a traditional furnishings store into what I call a lifestyle gallery,” Shepherd explains. Now that her creativity has been sparked, there’s no going back. “I will not stop and I will not be staid. This store is going to continually evolve.” 692 Main St., Park City, 435-658-9857, dresseddesign.com

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PHOTOS BY SCOT ZIMMERMAN; STORY BY JOSH PETERSEN

This new Park City shop isn’t just a furniture store—it’s a lifestyle.


MARBLE

ETCHING & STAINING A THING OF THE PAST

800-964-2330 | opalluxurysurfaces.com


style file |

MAKING ARRANGEMENTS

ENJOYING A DRY SPELL Go ahead and call it a comeback: Dried flowers are having a moment, again.

“As aesthetics get more natural and organic, people are more comfortable with dry flowers,” says floral designer Sarah Winward. She’s not talking about yesteryear’s tight wheat shafts and bulky seed pods, but florals and foliage that are more wispy, loose and ethereal—like those displayed in this grouping of simple-yet-stunning arrangements. Winward foraged roadsides for the pink, fuzzy-headed Apache Plume as well as the nondescript “Roadsidea,” as she jokingly refers to the taller, unidentified stems. The designer staged them in petite Judy Jackson vases featuring little openings. “The small mouths allow you to display just one or a few stems, so that you can really appreciate their shapes and textures.” The impact created by multiple containers paired with the simplicity of the dried flowers promises “no fail” arrangements, Winward contends. But, she warns, “Just because they last longer than fresh-cut flowers doesn’t mean they have to be kept for years gathering dust. Think of them as just as special—and as fleeting.” Sarah Winward, SLC, sarahwinward.com

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PHOTOS HEATHER NAN

Sarah Winward


Live

Furniture, Accessories and Interior Design

ivyinteriorsutah.com

801.486.2257

YOUR STYLE

3174 S. Highland Dr. Salt Lake City, UT 84106


OUT & ABOUT

PHOTO ADAM BARKER

style file |

THE SPIRIT OF ’71 Snowbird’s reimagined restaurant celebrates one groovy year. The year is 1971. Frazier knocks out Ali; Kissinger goes to China; Lennon’s “Imagine” tops the charts alongside Marvin Gaye’s “What’s Going on;” Willie Mays hits his 638th home run; Walt Disney World opens in Florida and rainbow motifs arch their way across orangeand-mustard hued décors. And, here in Utah, Snowbird opened the lifts, racing to the December finish line with crews battling a problem that would become the resort’s trademark: too much snow.

GET THE LOOK

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It's been over a year since Snowbird gutted the restaurants in the base of The Cliff Lodge and replaced them with the light and airy SeventyOne in homage to the ’Bird's earliest days. Today, it’s a welcome change from the wooded darkness of El Chanate and the Keyhole. The new bar and restaurant is retro fabulous, featuring throwback photos on the walls, comfy banquet seating and plenty of year-round patio space (thanks to high-BTU heaters). The upbeat retro design is old made new

In-the-Groove Retro Vibes

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again, as is the family-friendly menu. Think nachos, only modernized with ahi tuna—a popular first-course nibbler. Or meatloaf, now served meatless with 2020 flair featuring Beyond Burger “meat.” Indeed the SeventyOne menu is clearly built for variety, with small plates for sharing around après drinks, and heartier fare for fully coursed lunch or dinner. Dust off those bell-bottoms. 9320 Cliff Lodge Dr., Snowbird, 801-933-2222, snowbird.com

(L to R) Knoll Saarinen Armless Chair, $1,115, knoll.com; Triangle Mosaic Tiles by Clayhaus, starting at $53 sq. ft., European Marble & Granite, SLC, europeanmarbleandgranite.com; Milo Baughman’s Tear Drop swivel-tilt chair by Thayer Coggin, starting at $3,135, Forsey’s Fine Furniture, SLC, forseys.com; 70s Pillow by Kravet, to the trade, Curate to the Trade, SLC, curatetothetrade. com; Retroact 3 Wall Clock, $32, society6.com; Louis Poulsen PH 5 Mini Pendant, starting at $714, lumens.com



REMODEL

MAKING CHANGE

Photographer Rebekah Westover and a team of pros transformed tired rooms into a showcase of dazzling details and savvy space solutions. BY JOSH PET ERSEN PHOTOS BY

R EBEK A H W ESTOV ER

I

PHOTO BY SCOT ZIMMERMAN

t just needed an update,” says photographer Rebekah Westover, describing her family’s Orem home. She wasn’t planning on giving it a major redo, but she did have her eye on a new sofa from Gatehouse No. 1 in Orem. Stephanie Holdaway, the co-owner of Gatehouse and Westover’s close friend, envisioned much more. She suggested a new rug, a smarter layout and a complete furniture overhaul. Westover’s friend Steve Tiek, principal of Tiek Design Group, weighed in too. He proposed significant architectural changes, and soon the project grew from a simple sofa swap to an inspiring, full-on remodel. Here’s how they did it.

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BEFORE

MAKE AN ENTRANCE The refreshed entry provides an enticing preview of the project. “It tells the story of the colors and beautiful things waiting around the corner,” Holdaway says. In the compact space, the team introduced numerous colors, textures and design elements that recur elsewhere in the home, establishing continuity. They also chose impactful pieces—like a space-expanding mirror and velvet ottomans that tuck beneath a leggy table—that are as practical as they are pretty. The revamped space proves that an entry of any size can, and should, feel special.

CLEANSE YOUR PALETTE Westover recalls Holdaway’s advice, “You don’t have to play it safe in your own home. Just be you.” To Westover, that meant celebrating her love of color. Out with the brown and taupe, in with fresh white and uplifting blues, reds and shots of green. The team built a backdrop of soothing whites and creams and

then added bold color moments including a large blue rug in the living room. Holdaway chose a range of shades that are cohesive but not identical. “I love bringing in something unexpected and kind of random in fun ways that look collected,” she says. “It gives a room a lot more personality, character and depth than if you just stick with one palette.”

SPARK YOUR FIRE Out with the dated boulders, in with an updated fireplace design that is both sleek and cozy. Tiek traded the bulky stone facade for a classic, sophisticated mantle from Stone Mountain Castings and a new insert from Hearth and Home. “A cast mantelpiece feels a lot more rooted and timeless,” he explains. “It doesn’t feel as imposing, even though it feels more significant.” Now, the fireplace adds warmth to the living room and serves as its main focal point. “Everything’s cozier, more intimate and more conversational gathered around the fireplace,” Westover says.

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REMODEL

SEAT YOURSELF “When you create a room that has comfortable, inviting seating, people will automatically gather in that space,” Holdaway says. In the old layout, furnishings hugged the walls. Today, a floating seating area, anchored by a gather-around ottoman, increases the cozy-factor dramatically. Westover says her old living area felt like a “pass-through room,” but the new seating arrangement feels more inviting and intentional. “It’s sort of like a magical jewelry box to feel cozy in,” Tiek says.

LIGHTEN UP Westover and Holdaway chose elements that keep the rooms light and bright. In the living room, for example, open-framed bobbin chairs and light fixtures foster an

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airy ambiance while the dining room’s glass-front credenza adds some heft without feeling heavy or closed-off. Mirrors and reflective surfaces throughout introduce unique shapes and frames, while visually expanding space by reflecting light and views. “Rebekah’s knack for creating great images influenced the mirror placements, which offer peeks into other eye-catching rooms,” Holdaway says.

GO FOR THE GOLD “Rebekah loves a little bling,” Holdaway observes. “She’s automatically drawn to anything with a shine.” Strategically placed metals—from floor lamps to picture frames to a drapery rod—unify the decor and move the eye from space to space. The mixed finishes create a more

casual look, and Westover picked pieces she loved rather than sticking to a rigid vision. The diverse range of metals includes high-sheen gold inspired by her favorite jewelry, as well as brass with striking black metal captured by the living room chandelier from Hudson Valley Lighting.

ROUND IT OUT “If you have too many straight, jagged lines in a smaller space, it may create visual barriers that are less inviting,” Holdaway explains. She softened the room’s square angles and hard lines with curved and rounded elements. Circular designs appear in end tables, mirrors, stools and the living room light fixture, which Westover calls “grand and elevated.”


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MOTORIZATION


Homeowner and interiors photographer Rebekah Westover

COLLECT YOURSELF Westover gathered personal items and displayed them in collections to prevent a scattered, chaotic decor. Jewelry, metal bowls and table lamps display her love of all things shiny. She already owned much of the chinoiserie porcelain, which delivers sculpted shapes and a brilliant shade of blue to mantles and tabletops. Her collection of books is both aesthetically pleasing and a portrait of her artistic inspirations. These accessories make the home feel lived-in and fresh, telling a unique personal story.

PLAY WITH PATTERNS, TEXTURES AND LAYERS “There’s nothing in the whole room that’s boring,” says Holdaway, who made the décor dance with carefully curated shots of pattern—antelopeprint pillows, an abstract blue-andwhite rug and intricate chinoiserie. Mixed textures, including plush velvets,

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woven linens, supple leathers and nubby weaves, elevate the décor further. The team took a maximalist’s approach to fabrics and finishes. The “more-ismore” aesthetic boasts livable layers that add dimension, while showcasing Westover’s personal taste and style.

WORK YOUR WALLS “We wanted to give the spaces a more classic and historic context,” Tiek says, explaining the changes he made to the home. While Westover’s husband was initially wary of any architectural work, Tiek explained that even simple tweaks can make a big impact. In addition to updating the fireplace, he ditched an unnecessary plant shelf and modernized outdated arches, remnants of what he laughingly calls “the dark ages of architecture.” Now, a personal gallery wall replaces the old shelf, and new custom casing between the living and dining areas provides a timeless look. “Everything is very clean and transitional,” Tiek says.



fun for t he

OF IT

Designer Stephanie Hunt revives a Deer Valley home with an exuberant mix of colors, patterns and surprising details—and the result is an upbeat family getaway. BY BRAD MEE

PHOTOS BY MELISSA KELSEY

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PORTRAIT BY BLAKE PETERSON

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Fresh, fearless and unabashedly upbeat: The reimagined décor of this Deer Valley ski home puts fun at the forefront, woven into spaces enlivened with vibrant colors, playful patterns, collected art and surprises at every turn. The design project was a collaboration between Stephanie Hunt of Flairhunter (Park City and Montecito) and Hollis Jordyn Interiors (Los Angeles). “The original architecture and finishes were dark, heavy and very early-2000s,” says Hunt, recounting old flocked wallpaper, awkward spaces and steampunk industrial design elements that sunk the overworked interior. The new homeowners saw past all of this, recognizing the interior’s huge potential. “They wanted us to lighten it up and infuse it with fun that we balanced with organic, earthy warmth,” Hunt explains. Mission accomplished. Today, spirited style and unexpected details flow throughout, creating an oasis of leisure and play for the active family of five. How did it all come together? Come on in and discover for yourself.


lively dining “Less formal and more fun!” exclaims Hunt, describing an upbeat dining area designed as much for gathering around a board game as a four-course family dinner. A mid-century, Scandinavian style chandelier hangs above the table and a fantastical mix of chairs that fosters the interior’s original, eclectic design. Vintage skis perform as wall art. “We didn’t want just an expected cliché of old skis, so we lacquered them in dark green to tie in the color of the trees and assorted fabrics, rugs and art in the house,” Hunt explains. Vintage skis from Right at Home, Park City.

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edited art White walls, dark window trim and mid-tone wood floors deliver the lighter, Scandinavian feel the team crafted for a backdrop. “We chose Benjamin Moore’s Simply White because it isn’t sterile and has some warmth,” Hunt says. Ceramic wall art hangs above a bright orange wishbone chair to create a simple-yet-striking vignette on a stark wall between the living and dining areas. “Editing is important,” Hunt explains. “Negative space allows things to breathe.”

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open living “We needed a strong vertical statement,” states Hunt, who integrated a dramatically tall stacked-firewood box into the fireplace that she and the team reimagined with gray, clean-lined stone and a new hearth. Bold textures and arresting colors drive the family room’s engaging design, as do shapely furniture pieces. “They’re comfortable, strong profiles with careful attention to interesting upholstery and textiles,” Hunt notes. A pair of Sherpa steelframed chairs and two leather-and-hide lounge chairs sit on opposite ends of the sculptural wood-and-marble coffee table. A nubby, hand-knotted rug anchors the eclectic sitting area with organic texture and subtle pattern. The throw is from Root’d, Sherpa chairs are from San Francisco Design and bold pillows are from Sien + Co inside PC Mercantile; all located in Park City.


bold entry The team stripped the entry’s towering post of its old silver-and-black coating and revived it with a “Nordic-nod with an honest raw finish,” Hunt explains. She also painted beams and window trim black to foster a strong, contrasting palette. A flatweave Kilim rug from Adib’s Rug Gallery anchors the entry with striking pattern, while a LawsonFenning tapestry and Anthropologie baskets are among many artisan accents placed throughout the home.

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upbeat bunks “Energetic and girly,” says Hunt, describing the redesigned bunk room that serves as a stylish retreat for three daughters. The team removed sharp metal bunks and replaced them with custom, clean-lined versions painted white with oak accents. Boldly patterned Scion wallpaper and Schumacher drapery fabric reinforce the room’s high-contrast black and white palette, while bedding, art, accents and art deliver lively color, pattern and texture. The Rebecca Klundt painting is from Terzian Galleries, the Moroccan rug is from Regency Royale and the bunks were craft by North North’s Ben Manheimer in SLC.

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Walls Simply White / OC-117 Benjamin Moore

Window Frames Iron Ore / SW 7069 Sherwin-Williams

Kitchen/Bar Cabinets Lead Gray / 2131-30 Benjamin Moore

mixed media The upstairs media room doubles as a guest bedroom furnished with a sleeper sofa. “We wanted it to feel really comfortable without sacrificing color, pattern and art as our overall design approach,” Hunt says. A screen print on linen by Park City artist Elizabeth Carrington inspired a mix of colorful pieces including lounge chairs upholstered in grass-green corduroy by Cowtan & Tout, an ottoman’s indigo patterned textile from Pindler and a blue-and-ecru woven rug from McGee and Co. France and Son game chairs surround a custom table by Landon Cole.


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TREASURE HUNT For Flairhunter’s Stephanie Hunt, every piece counts. These are a few that helped create this project’s spirited look.

Andromeda from Schumacher, to the trade, Schumacher, fschumacher.com

Imagined World Petite Accent Chair, $698, Anthropologie, SLC, anthropologie.com

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Pila Handwoven Pillow, $245, Sien + Co, Park City, sienandco.com

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Archway Mirror, $3,500, Bower Studios, bower-studios. com

Radial Chandelier, $2,875, Lawson-Fenning, lawsonfenning.com

Kantha throw blanket, $129 each, Urban Outfitters, Murray, urbanoutfitters.com

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Opuntia wallpaper by Scion, to the trade, Style Library, stylelibrary.com

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landing

“We wanted to create an art moment, strong form and architecture in an otherwise empty space,” says Hunt, who framed a full-length arched mirror with Mquan ceramic sconces at the top of the stairs. A vintage runner from Adib's Rug Gallery grounds the space with color.

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Kimche hang from barstools­— a nod to the family’s love of travel and adventure.

bath

3 An oversized canvas by artist Jay Kelly joins a shapely tub, bubble chandelier, collected rugs and organic accents to offset the hard edges of the master bathroom’s marble and glass. Art from J Go Gallery, Park City.

kitchen

The team stripped out the industrial kitchen and replaced it with all things light, bright and comfortable. Honed Calacatta Colorado marble tops dark-toned cabinets, and a full-height backsplash of Zellige tile creates a “pillowed, quilted look,” Hunter says. Imperfect hand-blown glass pendants dazzle without detracting from the room’s views. Journey beads by artist Stefani

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bar

Staged beneath the stairs, a new bar features open shelves, marble countertops and cabinets painted Benjamin Moore’s Lead Gray. “It reads dark gray or black rather than navy because I wanted the architecture of the home to read neutral for the art and upholstery,” Hunt explains.

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SHOW OFF In a new Alpine kitchen, Chad and Rochelle Broadhead put a pretty entertaining space front and center. BY BR A D M EE

PHOTOS BY R EBEK A H W ESTOV ER

OPEN (BUT SEPARATE) LIVING The kitchen resides at the end of a great room that’s flooded with light from a wall of floor-to-ceiling windows. The living and dining areas’ 19-foot-high ceiling gives way to a lower kitchen ceiling height measuring 11 feet. “The lower ceiling delineates the open kitchen from the rest of the great room and makes it feel cozy,” Rochelle says. The team paid a great deal of attention to the space’s design and details, reflecting the room’s importance to the homeowners. “Today’s clients are hyper-focused on the design of critical areas where they spend time, and the kitchen is definitely one of these,” Chad explains.

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ne path to kitchen bliss is to put pretty up front and place the purely practical out of sight. That’s the approach Cambridge Home Company’s Chad and Rochelle Broadhead took when they created a bespoke kitchen for clients who wanted an inviting space designed for entertaining. “We made the main kitchen more formal and dressy and created a scullery for cooking, storage and the inevitable messes,” says Rochelle, who describes the open kitchen’s style— as well as that of the rest of the Alpine home she and Chad built and designed—as Modern Colonial. “It’s a classic and historic design, but modernized,” she says. To create the look, Rochelle dished up a multitude of delicious design elements and memorable details. Here are some of our favorites.

FOCAL WALL “We always want there to be a focal point,” says Rochelle, who designed the kitchen’s back wall to be exactly that. “Our clients wanted the whole thing to read marble,” she explains, so she clad the wall and range hood entirely in Calacatta Capri marble from The Stone Collection. “The dramatic stone modernizes the space.” A pair of full-height bistro shelves front the stone wall with shimmering brass and glass. “They’re part of the show,” Rochelle explains, but that doesn’t mean they’re all show. Stacks of easy-to-reach everyday dishes and glassware make the shelves as functional as they are fabulous.

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BUILT-IN HUTCHES Rochelle designed a pair of built-in, glass-doored cabinets to resemble age-old china hutches. The painted finish, paneled sides, footed bases and oil-rubbed bronze hardware promote their past-perfect style.

INTEGRATED APPLIANCES Rochelle disguised the Sub-Zero refrigerator and freezer behind painted door panels. She extended the paneled doors above the height of the concealed appliances so that the top of the doors align with those of the adjacent built-in china hutches and room opening. “I wanted to maintain a clean, continuous visual line,” she says. She placed hidden cabinets above the appliances to store bottles of water and soda.

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FARMHOUSE SINK/ MIXED HARDWARE A traditional faucet pairs with a farmhouse sink to foster the room’s historic style. “I love the single bowl because it provides plenty of room for cooking and dishes,” says Rochelle, who positioned the sink so that its user could overlook the great room and mountain views. The designer chose polished nickel hardware in an assortment of pulls and knobs that foster the cabinetry’s furniture-look style.


CUSTOM CABINETS To create the look of an age-old furniture piece, Rochelle detailed the white-oak footed island with faux apothecary drawers and enriched it with a stained finish. “This helped warm up the overall design,” she says. The designer painted the remainder of the footed cabinets with Benjamin Moore’s Gray Mist. “It complements rather than matches the wall color and is not a stark white, which wouldn’t look historic,” she explains.

Cabinets Gray Mist Benjamin Moore

Walls Dove Wing Benjamin Moore

Trim White Dove Benjamin Moore

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BLACK ISLAND COUNTERTOP Nocturnal Honed Granite from The Stone Collection tops the wood-toned island with a dark, easy-care surface. “This granite delivers the timeless look of soapstone, and that’s what we were going for,” Rochelle says.

DESIGN RECIPE

Time-honored and of-the-moment elements combine to create this kitchen’s show-stopping style.

Nocturnal Honed Granite and Calacatta Capri marble, The Stone Collection, SLC, thestonecollection.com

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Bistro bowls, Crate & Barrel, Murray, crateandbarrel.com

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Traditional Pulldown Faucet, Waterstone Faucets, Mountainland Design, SLC, mountainlanddesign.com

White Oak Butcher Block, FloForm, floform.com

1930s French Bistro Shelving, RH, SLC, rh.com


LIGHT-FILLED SCULLERY

Chad and Rochelle Broadhead, owners of Cambridge Home Company, an interior design-build firm.

“Nearly all of our clients have a scullery set off from their main kitchens,” Chad says. Designed for cooking, cleaning and storing, this scullery supports the dressier main kitchen designed for entertaining, but that doesn’t mean it’s dim or drab. Flooded with natural light, the space is decked out with two-tone painted cabinets, stone and butcher block countertops and easy-to-access open storage bins.

WOOD WORK SURFACE Butcher block countertops by FloForm frame the Wolf range, adding an organic, visually warm surface that also plays to the design’s modern colonial style.

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Provo | Sun Valley | Salt Lake City | Jackson Hole | Boise WWW.MOUNTAINLANDDESIGN.COM


PHOTO SCOT ZIMMERMAN

Homes

Nurturing colors, mixed materials and organic forms drive the design of this gathering room in Park City, page 58.

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“It’s like a ship’s observation deck,” says interior designer Kristin Rocke, describing the spectacular windowfront great room area furnished with separate sitting areas anchored by uniquely shaped hand-knotted rugs. A slatted cedar ceiling extends seamlessly to the outdoor eaves, extending the interior décor beyond the walls of glass. The sculpture is by Utah artist Cordell Taylor.

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a clear

VISION Breathtaking vistas offer an inspiring backdrop for a Park City sanctuary that celebrates its natural surroundings with dynamic design. BY BRAD MEE PHOTOS BY SCOT ZIMMERMAN

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With her exuberant color palettes and daring gestures, Kristin Rocke has never been timid about making bold design statements. But every so often, an interior calls for a more nuanced approach. Such was the case for this new Park City vacation house located in the gated Promontory community. “The setting is extraordinarily quiet, both visually and audibly, so the design needed restraint,” says Rocke, principal of K. Rocke Design. While many mountain homes can feel heavy and dark, this hillside haven draws from its sweeping vistas of land and sky for a luminous yet grounded décor. “It opens to the landscape with great views and light penetration,” Rocke explains. “The rooms feel as if they’re floating above the scenery.” The site’s slope played a key role. “The home is on a very steep site that dictated that the house be quite linear. As a result, it looks like it is growing out of the lot,” says Ron Lee, architectural designer. Rocke worked closely with the homeowners, Lee and contractor Mike McNulty to fashion an interior that is as dynamic and site-driven as the modern home itself. A pivoting front door opens to a spacious great room wrapped in floor-to-ceiling windows and crowned with a tongue-andgroove cedar ceiling. The overhead wood extends seamlessly to the underside of outdoor overhangs, blurring the line between indoors and out. This connection between in and out is one of many features inspired by mid-century modern design, including flat roofs, clearstory windows, exposed posts and beams and large areas of stone. “We wanted the flavor of mid-century without making it the entire meal,” Lee explains. Underfoot,

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The home was designed as a gathering place for its owners. In its great room, Rocke suspended a “floating cage of lights” by Alan Mizrahi above sitting areas connected by back-to-back sofas. The two-sided fireplace is clad with combed limestone panels, and the rift-oak floors derive their near-black hue from a nontoxic vinegar-and-steel-wool treatment that activates the dark color. Carefully curated furniture selections include mid-century Burma Bentwood armchairs, a Milo Baughman Wave chaise and a Sebastian Herkner Bell table that foster the great room’s engaging modernmeets-mountain décor. OPPOSITE: A canvas by Utah artist Lenka Konopasek hangs on a sliding panel, part of the entry’s custom built-in cabinets crafted in walnut by Bradshaw Design. A large pivot door of glass connects the interior to the front of the home.

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One of two staircases conceived by architectural designer Ron Lee features a floating landing, glassand-steel railings and open treads with recessed LED lighting beneath. Shaggy paper hides, created by Utah artist Lenka Konopasek, hang on the wall and provide a modern twist on a traditional mountain décor element. Here, and throughout the home, Rocke dressed the walls in Benjamin Moore’s White Dove for its “slightly warm but non-yellow” hue. OPPOSITE TOP: A modern take on traditional antler chandeliers, two polished stainless-steel fixtures hang above a live-edge wood table surrounded by chairs seated in mohair. Beyond, an entertaining kitchen features double islands and a gleaming backsplash of backpainted glass. Rocke designed the custom modern cabinets crafted by Carriage House Mill. OPPOSITE BOTTOM: Kristin Rocke, principal of K. Rocke Design

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PHOTO HEATHER NAN

wide-plank rift oak floors anchor the interior with a dramatic, near-black finish. Open living spaces fill the main level with shapely furnishings, hushed tones and striking features, including a modern stone fireplace, sculpture-like open staircase and handsome built-in cabinetry. “This house has a great balance between heft and lightness,” Rocke explains. The designer fashioned the great room’s monolithic two-sided fireplace with combed limestone panels dramatically set at varied depths. She used blocks of solid Nairobi limestone to form the massive hearth and mantel. “The hearth alone weighs 3,500 pounds,” she says. To offset the heroic feature, she suspended an ethereal cage of lights that appears to float above the room, illuminating and filling its volume without adding mass. “It has a weightlessness, like the space,” Rocke says. A palette of neutral tones—off-whites, grays and taupes with hints of brown, blue, aqua and eggplant—similarly advance the airy scheme. “Analogous colors make a space feel peaceful and serene,” she explains. To infuse the tranquil décor with depth and dimension, the designer selected exquisite, texture-rich textiles. In the great room, for example, charred faux bois velvet dresses a pair of mid-century Gio Ponti wing chairs flanking the fireplace, lux mohair covers a vintage Milo Baughman Wave chaise and a tweedy weave garbs

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A feathered hombre-striped fabric by Kravet frames the master bedroom’s expansive windows with a light-as-air pattern and billowy, semi-sheer draperies. Tranquil shades of blue green, layers of texturerich textiles and breathtaking mountain views imbue the space with serenity and lux style. TOP LEFT: A three-sided fireplace—formed of banded, hot rolled steel and a limestone base—separates the master suite’s sitting and sleeping areas. BOTTOM LEFT: Resembling branches covered in sparkling ice crystals, the bedroom’s chandelier nods to the site’s snow-covered landscape.

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ABOVE: Located on the upper level, a light-filled gathering room performs as a modern-day media and socializing space. Rocke enlivened the room with textiles featuring more spirited patterns and colors, including sheer drapery fabric from Romo. “It looks like an abstract watercolor painting,” Rocke says. “This is a great way to bring in color and a loose pattern that feels sophisticated.” OPPOSITE (CLOCKWISE FROM TOP): Cristallo quartzite tops the master bathroom’s floating walnut vanity. Rocke set the floor’s faux bois porcelain tile from European Marble & Granite in a striking geometric pattern. A three-side glass shower is formed with privacy glass that changes from clear to fogged with a flip of a switch. Sparkling Cristallo quartzite surfaces frame the open, airy feature. A broad window soaks a freestanding Mirabelle soaking tub in broad views and natural light.

back-to-back sofas. “These tactile fabrics scream to be touched,” says Rocke, who also curated a compelling mix of wood furnishings and custom cabinetry that tempers the modern architecture with warmth and organic character. “The wood is dominant, and it helps make the rooms feel extremely comfortable,” she explains. The adjoining dining room shares the twosided fireplace and hosts a sapwood-edged table surrounded by mohair-seated chairs. Above, Rocke hung a pair of modern antler-shaped chandeliers, interpreted in stainless steel with lights inset at their pointed ends. “Two fixtures illuminate a long table more effectively than one,” she explains. The nearby kitchen, designed for entertaining, boasts double islands, a back wall of painted glass and transparent upper cabinets. Across the room, an open staircase de-

signed by Lee features open, lighted treads and clean-lined, steel-and-glass railings. “All of this glass moves light throughout the space, making it look fresh and well lit,” the designer says. Rocke didn’t use all of the goodies on the main level. Upstairs, she furnished the luxurious master suite with a channel-tufted bed and lowprofile velvet chairs that allow stunning views and glorious light to flow unimpeded throughout the airy space. Here, and in an adjacent sitting area set beyond a three-sided fireplace, floorto-ceiling, semi-sheer hombre draperies foster the suite’s dream-like décor. So too do plush blue-green rugs and sumptuous fabrics, as well as a custom chandelier and matching sconces resembling dazzling branches of ice crystals. “The space is so light and serene, it envelops you in comfort,” Rocke explains.

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A chandelier by Moooi hangs above Julian Chichester’s Rotary dining table in the lower-level family room. The Tatiana pottery is from Rocke’s store Glass House and the art is by Mark England. OPPOSITE TOP: A limestone-clad fireplace anchors the cozy lower-level family room. Rocke mounted the TV on a dark steel backdrop, making its black screen all but disappear when not in use. A sheepskin-seated chair counteracts the bulk and straight lines of a large sectional upholstered in a “bulletproof” Romo fabric. Nearby, a bar area papered in Phillip Jeffries grasscloth showcases the color of the owner’s favorite drink, whiskey. OPPOSITE BOTTOM: “It looks like it is growing out of the lot,” says Lee, describing the hillside home. Expansive windows and broad decks open the modern house to its scenic mountain setting.

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The master bathroom is equally indulgent, with a freestanding tub, floating walnut vanity, three-side glass shower (formed with privacy glass that changes from clear to fogged with a flip of a switch), sparkling Cristallo quartzite surfaces, and a partial glass ceiling that floods the spacious sanctuary in natural light. “Its like being inside an exquisite glow box,” Rocke says. More pronounced colors and laid-back comfort infuse the upstairs gathering/media room as well as the cozy family room and bar located on the home’s lower level. Being part of creating the spectacular home was, Rocke says with a smile, an absolute pleasure and privilege. “The owners were such lovely and trusting people to work with,” she says, “which brings a project like this to another level.” The result is not simply another new mountain house, but a dream escape where the interiors and architecture are as remarkable as the landscape and scenery that inspired them.

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“We wanted a relaxed, peaceful space,” explains homeowner Hailey Devine, describing the light-filled family room anchored by a towering fireplace finished in concrete-look plaster. “It’s the centerpiece of our home,” she says. The House of Jade design team conceived a neutral palette for this and other main-level spaces, allowing rich textures, engaging materials and organic forms to prevail. OPPOSITE: Social media celebrities Brad and Hailey Devine with their girls Lucy and Greta.

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devine INSPIRATION In South Jordan, social media stars Brad and Hailey Devine create a personalized family home inspired by travel, family history and a love of laid-back, culturally-driven design. BY BRAD MEE

PHOTOS BY LINDSAY SALAZAR

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“This has been our biggest adventure yet,” exclaims Hailey Devine, describing the new home she and husband Brad recently completed for their young family. That’s saying something, given the fact that these social media stars have explored the world as a video production team before creating “Somewhere Devine”—a website sharing a behind-the-scenes look at their global travels. That was thirteen years ago, and now the duo has children, a red-hot social following and, as their latest YouTube series “Making a House a Home” celebrates, a fabulous new family home in South Jordan. A love of family drove the home’s design from the get-go. “Home is really about family and a place to gather,” says Hailey, referring to more than her immediate clan of Brad and their girls Lucy and Greta. She’s talking about heritage and family history, things that mean the world to this couple. “Brad is half English and half Chilean, and my family’s roots are in Norway,” she explains. The young family traveled to their homelands to gather inspiration, memories and treasures for the new house. “We wanted to engrave our family history into our children’s hearts and into the walls of our home.” The Devines teamed with contractor Holmes Homes to build and customize their dream dwelling. Among the house’s many unique features are arches inspired by dwellings they admired in Kensington, England and Chile. The largest of the interior arches connects the family room and kitchen. “We changed it from eight to ten feet high to really open the spaces,” Hailey recalls. Soaring ceilings, a two-story plastered fireplace and white walls create an airy backdrop for the Devines’ personalized décor. The couple always knew the ambiance they wanted, but confess that they weren’t sure about the actual design. “I wanted it to feel collected and lived in, but I didn’t know how it should look,” Hailey admits.

TOP LEFT: Black Scandinavian-style chairs surround a rustic wood table in the dining room, where an Arteriors chandelier enlivens the space. “It has collected feel, yet formal look,” Hailey says. The small oil paintings are from House of Jade Interiors. BOTTOM LEFT: A gallery wall captures family photos from time spent in the Faroe Islands. OPPOSITE: “We wanted it to feel separate from our home environment,” says Hailey, explaining the décor of the office she and Brad share. Handsome arched doors open to the room dramatically dressed in a dark charcoal-colored paint. An Ace chandelier by Troy Lighting hangs above a table from Crate & Barrel.

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The kitchen’s feature wall boasts a concrete-look plaster finish that accentuates a simple range hood and alder open shelves stacked with dinnerware, art and keepsakes. Montclair White quartz tops a storagerich island with cabinets that store the girl’s easy-to-access crafts and toys.

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“It’s like a giant rainbow,” says Krason describing the 10-foot-high arch connecting the kitchen and family room. White beadboard and wood beams adorn the kitchen ceiling with Norwegian detailing. BOTTOM LEFT: Set high on a kitchen shelf, a landscape painting fosters the room’s timeless, collected style. BOTTOM RIGHT: A simply shaped hood crowns Hailey’s must-have Café range featuring a white finish and mixed metal accents.

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Interior designers Erin Morgan and Kirsten Krason, House of Jade Interiors.

Fortunately, she says, they turned to House of Jade Interiors’ Kirsten Krason and Erin Morgan to bring their ideas to life. “They are so talented, and they really nailed it,” Hailey cheers. “The Devines have a very distinct style, so we took their vision and made it tangible,” says designer Krason, who is also Hailey’s friend and former neighbor. Working closely with the couple, the design duo devised a décor they describe as a rustic Scandinavian modern style that is cozy and warm. “We walked a fine line to balance all of these elements,” Krason says. In the family room, for example, they juxtaposed the modern-style plastered fireplace and neutral color palette with a live edge cocktail table, woven cane-back chair, textured fabrics and a flourishing fiddle-leaf fig. In the lightly-decorated master suite, the team furnished the bedroom space with a modern chaise, unmatched end tables and a bed loosely dressed in linen. “The bed looks pretty even when it is unmade,” Hailey says. Clean-lined pencil molding creates a graphic pattern that animates the headboard wall and traverses the ceiling to the opposite wall. Arched double doors open to a white bathroom enriched with natural wood cabinets, a modern orb pendant light and large-scale porcelain floor tiles.

TOP LEFT: “We call this Pride Rock,” jokes Hailey, describing the family room’s live edge cocktail table. BOTTOM LEFT: “The lower level is all about fun,” Krason says. A modern ping-pong table anchors the game room. A floor-toceiling niche artfully stores stacked firewood. OPPOSITE: Hailey envisioned the collected look of the lower level kitchenette where black Mitzi sconces illuminate a gallery wall composed by House of Jade Interiors.

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Pencil molding artfully details the master bedroom’s walls and ceiling. Textured linen bedding and woven rugs enrich the room while small end tables, tiny pendant lights and a simply upholstered bed foster a serene, uncluttered style. BELOW LEFT: One of two mismatched bedside table displays a vintage camera. “It looks like a tree in our bedroom,” Hailey says. BELOW MIDDLE: A wood vanity, stained the same shade as the kitchen’s open shelves for design continuity, floats above a floor covered in large-scale porcelain tiles. BELOW RIGHT: The organic shape of a stump table contrasts with the modern lines of a freestanding tub.

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Arched double doors open to the master bathroom, where a floating vanity, individual wall mirrors and lighting from Hudson Valley’s Mitzi collection deliver a relaxed, upbeat style to the lightfilled space.

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1. “We had to have a little blue in the house,” says Hailey, referring the lower level family room’s cozy sofa. 2. Troy Lighting’s Hangar 31 pendants are from Lighting Design. 3. Texture delivers depth and dimension to the interior’s neutral palette. 4. Open shelves display art, pottery and casual dinnerware in the kitchen. 5. Space-saving benches pair with a concrete-top table in the off-thekitchen breakfast nook. 6. Plants and handmade pottery infuse the interior with natural, organic elements. 7. A fun playhouse nods to Hailey’s Norwegian family tree.

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A treasured travel photo hangs above the lower level’s fireplace framed with largescale plaster molding. Textured poofs provide easy-to-move seating to the cozy space.

Hailey’s favorite room is the kitchen. “We wanted to create a hybrid of a traditional Chilean feria mixed with a British cottage and a Norwegian cafe,” Hailey chuckles. “This is what we came up with.” The back wall—finished with concrete-look plaster—is an eye-catching backdrop for white cabinetry and open shelves stacked with everyday dishes, keepsakes, art and handmade pottery. Above the storage-rich island, industrial-style pendants drop from a ceiling clad in beadboard accented with exposed beams. “You see beadboard and beams in Norwegian homes,” Hailey explains. Integrated appliances, quartz countertops and a neutral palette foster the kitchen’s nurturing Scandinavian vibe. The adjoining breakfast nook hosts a concrete table paired with benches that help make the compact are feel more spacious. Brad favors the couple’s stylized office located off the home’s entry. “The star of the office is its doors,” says Krason, describing a pair of glass-paned arched

doors opening to a room dramatically cloaked in nearblack paint covering the ceiling as well as the shiplapclad walls. “The color actually makes the room feel larger,” Krason explains. A chic Troy ceiling light hangs above a geometrically shaped wood table, mixing modern and organic styles. To foster a creative, collected and well-traveled look, Hailey and Brad added a gallery wall of family photos, antique leather books and a treasured vintage camera purchased on London’s famed Portobello Road. “The Devines love to have things that speak to who they are,” says Krason, describing a personalized thread that links every room in the home, from the main level’s welcoming living areas to a funfilled lower level and tranquil sleeping spaces. The new home captures the couple’s adventurous spirit while also calming it. “This house has turned me into a total homebody,” Hailey says with a laugh. “We were always flying by the seat of our pants, traveling like crazy. Now I love being at home.”

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Exquisite trim and moldings adorn the ceiling and walls of the entry and nearby dining room. A checkerboard marble floor anchors the light-filled entry, reflected in part by an ornate floor mirror fronted by a shapely Noir console table. The dining room table and chairs are by RH; wallpaper by Lewis & Wood.

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IN GRAND

Style On a pastoral site in Salem, Marissa and John Pope create their stately family house, injecting modern touches while remaining true to the home’s classic spirit. BY BRAD MEE

PHOTOS BY REBEKAH WESTOVER

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For the first time in their lives, after 20 years of living in rented houses while bankrolling and building successful businesses, John and Marissa Pope finally decided to create their dream home. “We had leased homes while we invested in our companies, but just before John sold Jive Communications, he said it was time for me to design the home I’d always wanted,” Marissa recalls. The couple purchased a panoramic five-acre-plus Salem property and set to work planning the family home Marissa envisioned. Before the couple started their family that now includes six children, Marissa had studied interior design and home economics at BYU. Over the years, she nurtured her love of design while raising her family, upgrading and decorating their rented homes and helping family and friends beautify their interiors. “Nesting is a natural instinct for me­— creating spaces that are comfortable, restful and happy,” says Marissa, who recently opened her own design firm.

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A striking wheat-sheaf table adds a shot of glamour to the entry. A two-story staircase leads to the family’s bedrooms and a cozy gathering landing space. Millwork and handrail by RJ Lewis. OPPOSITE TOP: Leading from the family room to the conservatory, doors crafted by Columbia Millworks are topped with a charming stained-glass transom. Marissa Pope upholstered the sofa in a performance velvet to lend practicality to the posh room. “I wanted the space to be a little formal but not untouchable,” explains the homeowner and principal of Marissa Pope Interior Design. OPPOSITE BOTTOM: A light-filled hallway boasts a classic groin-vaulted ceiling and striking diamond-patterned walnut floors.

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Dark soapstone countertops contrast with the kitchen’s painted custom cabinetry crafted by Anvil Cabinet & Mill. Clé tile shimmers on the backsplashes. OPPOSITE TOP LEFT: A wood-beaded light fixture, cane chairs and a gallery wall of favorite art pieces give this dining nook a personalized, informal vibe. OPPOSITE TOP RIGHT: The kitchen’s built-in buffet features open shelving, Clé tile backsplash and brass hardware by Rocky Mountain Hardware. OPPOSITE BOTTOM: “I hid as many appliances as I could,” says Marissa, who disguised the kitchen’s refrigeration, dishwasher and other machinery with custom cabinetry. An arched bank of windows and the ceiling’s inset beamed tray infuse the welcoming space with bold architectural detail.

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In the master bedroom, delicate trim turns the walls into eye-catching works of art. To infuse the space with comfort and a soothing style, Marissa layered rugs, added plush velvets and created a pale palette of colors accented with rich meadow green. Art from One Kings Lane. OPPOSITE: A customized Susan Harter mural dresses the powder room walls with a charming pastoral scene. Mosaic floor tile, a black floating vanity and an ornately framed mirror deliver shots of drama to the enchanting space.

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Decorated for a daughter who loves all things vintage, the bedroom is dressed in metallic wallpaper and features window seats that frame a built-in desk. TOP LEFT: Dripping in crystals, a tiered black chandelier makes a bold statement at the top of the two-story staircase. BOTTOM LEFT: Double chaises furnish an elegantly dressed landing at the top of the stairs. A two-tone cabinet lends a modern twist to the traditional décor.

First and foremost, the couple wanted to create a place where they could entertain and gather with family. “One of my fondest memories from growing up was my mom always entertaining,” Marissa recalls. “If there were a reason to throw a party, we did.” She and John wanted the same experience for their kids, so they prioritized generous gathering spaces and fun-focused rooms while planning the new house with Harris Architecture. “We asked ourselves what spaces do we need, how do we live and what do we want to do in our lives,” says Marissa, who laughingly confesses the house grew during the design phase. Morphing from

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comfortably large to what some might coin colossal, the home includes traditional living spaces, as well as six bedrooms, a garden room, a gourmet kitchen, an indoor sports court, separate man and babe caves and a private study. The Popes signed Davies Design Build to construct the dwelling, and the firm’s in-house designers Natasha Williams, Emily Watson and Callie Neilsen assisted Marissa as she designed it. The Popes craved a timeless, livable and inspiring home. “I wanted it to look like the house had been here forever, and we came in and revamped it,” says Melissa, who shunned anything overly modern or staid and stodgy. To create this enduring-yet-updated look, she layered the

dwelling’s classic architecture and design elements with some contemporary details and furnishings that help foster the fresh, classic style that flows throughout. The engaging, timeless design greets guests the moment they step inside the front door. “Every home should have a proper entry,” says Marissa, who adorned hers with a soft-hued checkerboard marble floor, refined decorative moldings and a 11-foot-high coffered ceiling. “I didn’t want an intimidating two-story entry,” she explains. The entry opens to a 20-foot-high foyer, where a gracefully curved staircase leads to a gathering landing and all of the family’s second-level bedrooms. “I wanted all the kids on the same floor as us,” Marissa says.

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Reclaimed oak from a military transfer station clads the ceiling of the off-the-entry office. The rustic wood, grasscloth wallpaper, light-toned furnishings and shots of shimmering brass warm the dark room. The walls are painted with Sherwin-Williams’ Iron Ore.

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Upon first sight of the stately home, which sits on a fiveacre site in Salem, one feels transported back in time to Europe’s gracious past. Exterior stone from Beehive Brick & Stone; landscape design by Meadow Brook Design. BOTTOM: Marissa and John Pope with their young children (left to right): Kenzie, Trent, Levi, Hallie and Vivie.

The light-filled entry is a jumping-off point for numerous spaces defined by timeless style paired with spirited details. In the study, for example, a reclaimed oak plank ceiling offsets walls painted with Sherwin-Williams Iron Ore. “If you’re going to use black in a room, you want to balance it with something warm and comfortable,” Marissa says. ”It makes it cozy rather than oppressive.” In the powder room, an ornate mirror and a mural’s bucolic scene enlivens the space and charms all who enter. “The powder room is where you can go crazy,” she says. Other memorable elements include shimmering Clé tile that embellishes the kitchen’s backsplashes, elegant wall trim that animates the master bedroom, layered rugs that dress the daughter’s deco-inspired bedroom, a large floor mirror that backs the entry’s console and diamond-patterned walnut floors that enrich the dining room and main hallway. Throughout the Popes’ new home, the look is at once comforting and compelling, a decorative slight of hand that delivers the livable and timeless style that the Popes knew they would one day enjoy in their own home. “The best part is being able to see others enjoying the spaces I thought of for so long,” says Marissa, who adds with a laugh,“It feels like others are walking around in my dream.”

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DINING IN & OUT

O

The Big

This winter citrus brightens our taste buds all season long BY M A RY BROW N M ALOU F

T

They’re almost boring. Predictably round, textured like a basketball and so obviously orange. And they’re everywhere—literally. Oranges are the second most-favorite fruit in the country. Orange juice is on everyone’s breakfast table, or brunch table if you have some bubbly wine. So why even talk about them? Well, imagine a world without oranges and the color that was named after them. That’s not a world we want to live in. The orange we know—a cross between a pomelo and a mandarin— has the explosive juiciness of one and the subtly acidic sweetness of the other, and there is simply nothing like it.

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DINING IN & OUT

THE CROP IS IN They taste like summer, but their season is winter.

At their peak between December and April—traditionally, they were the treat in the toe of a Christmas stocking—is when you’ll find the usual navel oranges, Valencias, Hamlin, Sunstar, blood oranges, et al. You’ll also find relatively rarer relatives like satsuma mandarins (a case of the finest of these sold in Japan for $10,000 in November), the recently branded Halo and Cutie Clementines, and the hard-to-find, adorably tiny Kishu.

•S lice an orange horizontally (across the sections,) set on a cookie sheet and place in your oven heated to the lowest possible setting. Leave the slices until dry; this could take several hours. Check often; you don’t want to burn them. Use them to garnish cocktails, enliven charcuterie trays or zest up a main dish.

Orange carving 101 Use everything but the white stuff • Peel an orange carefully with a vegetable peeler or very sharp knife, taking care to cut off only the orangecolored peel—the white pith is bitter. Orange peel may be cut into julienne strips to use as a garnish or part of the

basic flavor mix. Candy it by cooking it in sugar syrup and then let it dry—add to sweet or savory main dishes, salads and desserts. Rub a salad bowl or drink glass with a larger piece to impart the orange oil’s fragrance subtly.

•U se orange sections, sauteed or fresh. A skinned orange section is called a supreme, and because orange skin is inedible unless cooked, a supreme is the main way (other than juice) to use an orange in hot or cold cuisine. To most easily cut it into sections, first cut a small slice from the top and bottom. Then cut away the peel in strips, top to bottom. Using a sharp knife, slice the pulp away from the white pith, cutting as close as possible to the bitter edge. When all the sections are cut away, squeeze the pith that remains to extract every last bit of juice.

SEEING ORANGE Both a color and fruit, few words deliver so much decorative zest. Amalfi Cielo wallpaper, grahambrown.com

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Orange Blossom wallpaper, cole-and-son.com

Arance wallpaper, cole-and-son.com

Orange Grove wallpaper, anthropologie.com


Beyond Breakfast Orange Recipes for round-the-clock dishes • Move your orange from the beginning of the day to the end. Caramelized oranges are one of the most elegant desserts on the planet. Serve orange sections, bathed in a golden caramel syrup scented with orange peel and orange liqueur, over a small scoop of vanilla gelato. • Serve an elegant lunch salad with orange sections and pitted Castelvetrano olives. Toss them in a dressing of white wine vinegar, olive oil and the juice left over from sectioning the fruit and add some watercress, chopped green onion tops, toasted pine nuts and crumbles of feta. • Make it the center of the plate. Duck a l’orange is a semi-classic dish derived from duck bigarade, which was made in the 1700s with very sour oranges. The sauce cut the fatness of the duck. Its modern degradation is usually made with chicken (so, coq

l’orange) and the sauce is too sweet and thickened with cornstarch. Compromise: Nicely brown chicken breasts in a little oil until almost done. Set aside and make the sauce. Boil ¼ cup red wine vinegar with 3 Tbsp. sugar until its red color starts to brown. Then add 2 cups chicken stock slowly, stirring. Set aside while you peel 2 oranges, saving the peel, then juicing them. Segment 2 more oranges. Bring the sauce to a simmer, add the orange juice and some large pieces of peel. Let simmer until it coats a spoon. You can thicken it with cornstarch, but why? Reduce it, stir in a jigger of Grand Marnier and a couple Tbsp. softened butter. Serve with the chicken and orange sections covered with the sauce, garnished with julienned bits of peel. It’s not as hard as it sounds and you can save extra sauce in the fridge for a day or so.

TO YOUR HEALTH Oh, yeah. Oranges are good for you. They contain: •6 4% of your RDA of vitamin C • Phytochemicals like carotenoids • Good amounts of B vitamins • Lots of trace minerals, other vitamins and energyproviding carbs • Even a tiny bit of protein

On the Menu

So many local restaurants use oranges in surprising ways. Here are a few faves:

ARLO RESTAURANT

FINCA

Chef Milo Carrier makes a dish of summer squash with lion’s mane mushrooms in a lovely saffron beurre blanc with dandelion pesto and garnishes it with the surprise of sweettart candied orange. 271 N. Center St., SLC, 385-266-8845, arlorestaurant.com

The Spanish-influenced menu here naturally includes several dishes with oranges, a signature flavor of Spain. Ensalada naranjas—literally, orange salad, mixes M&M Farm arugula with orange segments and shaved fennel in Spanish olive oil. The cheesecake dessert (tarta de queso) is flavored with orange and cajeta caramel, sweetened caramel made with goat milk. 1513 S. 1500 East, SLC, 801532-3372, fincaslc.com

CURRENT FISH & SEAFOOD The Caramelized Organic Salmon is first marinated in a soy and sake marinade, cooked to caramelize the exterior and served with green beans, boniato (a type of sweet potato) and an orange sauce tinged with tamarind. 279 E. 300 South, SLC, 801-326-3474, currentfishandoyster.com

RIVERHORSE ON MAIN The perennial favorite makes its Park City Old-fashioned with High West Double Rye, Pierre Ferrand Dry Curacao, orange segments, Angostura bitters and Griotte cherries (a type of sour cherry). 540 Main St., Park City, 435-649-3536, riverhorseparkcity.com

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ON PAPER

PHOTOS SCOT ZIMMERMAN

A nod to this home’s Park City location, interior designer Kristin Rocke conceived and colorized wallpaper featuring a witty graphic created from crossing skis and poles. The custom wallcovering dresses a bunk room, delivering a mod pattern and a hit-the-slopes theme. See the story on page 58. krockedesign.com

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Art/Antiques Modern West Fine Art 412 S. 700 West, Salt Lake City 801-355-3383 modernwestfineart.com

Builders/Contractors/ Construction Bartile 725 N. 1000 West, Centerville 801-295-3443 bartile.com

Jackson & Leroy 4980 S. Highland Dr., Salt Lake City 801-277-3927 jacksonandleroy.com

Jaffa Group 4490 N. Forestdale Dr. Suite 202, Park City 435-615-6873 jaffagroup.com

Cabinetry

Gatehouse No. 1 672 S. State St., Orem 801-225-9505 gatehousestyle.com

Helm 5253 S. State St., Murray 801-263-1292 helmhome.com

Ivy Interiors 3174 S. Highland Dr., Salt Lake City 801-486-2257 ivyinteriorsslc.com

Osmond Designs

Orem 1660 N. State St. 801-225-2555

Lehi 151 E. State St. 801-766-6448 osmonddesigns.com

Parkway Avenue Design and Mercantile 1265 Draper Pkwy., Draper 801-987-8164 parkwayavenuedesign.com

San Francisco Design Lone Pine

Salt Lake City

4084 W. 8370 South, West Jordan 801-282-6301 lonepinecabinet.com

2970 S. Highland Dr. 801-467-2701

Park City

Furnishings

1890 Bonanza Dr. 435-645-7072 sanfrandesign.com

Adib’s Rug Gallery

The Black Goose Design

3092 S. Highland Dr., Salt Lake City 801-484-6364 or 800-445-RUGS adibs.com

Curate To The Trade 360 S. Rio Grande St., Salt Lake City 801-618-0216 curatetothetrade.com

Forsey’s Fine Furniture + Interior Design

Traditional & Contemporary 2977 S. Highland Dr., Salt Lake City 801-487-0777

Craftsman House 2955 S. Highland Dr., Salt Lake City 801-463-0777 forseys.com

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Interior Design AMB Design 4680 S. Kelly Circle, Salt Lake City 801-272-8680 annemariebarton.com

Bradford R. Houston Design Studio inquiries@bradfordrhouston.com bradfordrhouston.com

Forsey’s Fine Furniture + Interior Design

Traditional & Contemporary 2977 S. Highland Dr., Salt Lake City 801-487-0777

Craftsman House 2955 S. Highland Dr., Salt Lake City 801-463-0777 forseys.com

Gatehouse No. 1 672 S. State St., Orem 801-225-9505 gatehousestyle.com

Ivy Interiors 3174 S. Highland Dr., Salt Lake City 801-486-2257 ivyinteriorsslc.com

K. Rocke Design/Glass House 3910 S. Highland Dr., Millcreek 801-274-2720 krockedesign.com

LMK Interior Design 7652 Holden St., Midvale 801-562-1933 theblackgoosedesign.com

4626 S. Highland Dr., Salt Lake City 801-272-9121 lmkinteriordesign.com

Osmond Designs

Home Accessories/ Stationery/Jewelry O.C. Tanner Jewelers

Salt Lake City 15 S. State St. 801-532-3222

City Creek Center 50 Main St., Suite 273, Salt Lake City 801-532-3223

Park City 416 Main St. 435-940-9470 octannerjewelers.com

Orem 1660 N. State St. 801-225-2555

Lehi 151 E. State St. 801-766-6448 osmonddesigns.com

Parkway Avenue Design and Mercantile 1265 Draper Pkwy., Draper 801-987-8164 parkwayavenuedesign.com


The Black Goose Design

Inside Out Architecturals

Venetian Tile & Stone

7652 Holden St., Midvale 801-562-1933 theblackgoosedesign.com

3412 S. 300 West Ste. A, Salt Lake City 801-487-3274 insideoutarchitecturals.com

825 W. 2400 South, Salt Lake City 801-977-8888 venetianstonegallery.com

Kitchen/Bath

Opal Luxury Surfaces

Mountain Land Design

800-964-2330 opalluxurysurfaces.com

Windows/Doors/ Window Coverings

Salt Lake City, UT

The Stone Collection

2345 S. Main St. 801-466-0990

2179 S. Commerce Center Dr., Ste. 500, West Valley City 801-875-4460 thestonecollection.com

Provo, UT 50 E. 500 South 801-932-0027

Park City Blind Blind & Design 1612 Ute Blvd., Ste 109A, Park City 435-649-9665 parkcityblind.com

Boise, ID 627 N. Dupont Ave., Ste.uite 102 208-258-2479

Sun Valley, ID 491 10th St. 208-576-3643

Jackson, WY

You don’t have to play it safe in your own home. Just be you.”

485 W. Broadway 307-200-3313 mountainlanddesign.com

Peppertree Kitchen & Bath 7940 S. 1300 West, West Jordan 801-565-1654 peppertreekitchen.com

—Stephanie Holdaway Story on page 34.

Lighting Hammerton 217 Wright Brothers Dr., Salt Lake City 801-973-8095 hammerton.com

Real Estate/Developments Red Ledges 205 N. Red Ledges Blvd., Heber City 877-733-5334 redledges.com

European Marble & Granite 2575 S. 600 West, South Salt Lake 801-974-0333 europeanmarbleandgranite.com

PHOTO REBEKAH WESTOVER

Stone/Tile

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SOURCES STYLE FILE PAGE 21 EDITOR’S PICK Eucalyptus Sconces by Palacek, The Garden Store, SLC, @thegardenstoresaltlake

PAGE 22 NOW TRENDING Kelly Wearstler, kellywearstler.com; Curate to the Trade, SLC, curatetothetrade.com; Glass House, SLC, glasshouseslc.com; Helm, Murray, helmhome.com; LMK Interior Design, SLC, lmkinteriordesign.com; O.C. Tanner Jewelers, SLC, octannerjewelers.com; Osmond Designs, Orem and Lehi, osmonddesigns. com; Phillip Jeffries, to the trade, phillipjeffries.com

Collection, SLC, thestonecollection.com; Stone countertop installation: Sandia Design, West Valley, sandiastone.com; Wood countertop: Floform, West Valley City, floform.com; Appliance distributor: Roth Distribution, SLC, subzero-wolf.com; Appliances/ showroom: Mountainland Design, SLC, mountainlanddesign.com; Barstools: RH, SLC, rh. com; Pantry stone countertops: Bedrosians Tile & Stone, SLC, bedrosians.com

FOR THE FUN OF IT PAGES 48-55

Sarah Winward, SLC, sarahwinward.com

Photographer: Melissa Kelsey, melissakelseyphotography.com; Contractor: Shane Mang, Nrgy, Heber, nrgyhomes.com; Interior Design: Flairhunter, Park City and Montecito, Calif., flairhunter.com; Hollis Jordyn Interiors, Los Angeles, Calif., hollisjordyndesign.com; Window blinds: Park City Blind & Design, Park City, parkcityblind.com; Stone countertops: The Stone Collection, SLC, thestonecollection.com; Zellige kitchen backsplash: Famosa Tile City, Costa Mesa, Calif., CA, famosatile.com

PAGE 32 ON THE TOWN

PAGE 49 DINING

SeventyOne, Snowbird, snowbird.com; Curate to the Trade, SLC, curatetothetrade.com; European Marble & Granite, SLC, europeanmarbleandgranite. com; Forsey’s Fine Furniture, SLC, forseys.com; Knoll, knoll.com; Lumens, lumens.com; Society6, society6.com

Light fixture: Lawson-Fenning, lawsonfenning.com; Vintage skis: Right at Home, Park City, rightathomedesigns.com

PAGE 24 BEHIND THE BRUSH Julie Nester Gallery, Park City, julienestergallery.com

PAGE 28 SHOP TALK Dressed Design, Park City, dresseddesign.com

PAGE 30 MAKING ARRANGEMENTS

REMODEL/MAKING CHANGE

PAGE 50 CHAIR VIGNETTE Chair: France and Son, franceandson.com; Ceramic wall hanging: M Quan Stuido, mquan.com

PAGES 34-38

PAGE 51 FAMILY ROOM

Photographer: Rebekah Westover, rebekahwestover. com; Architectural design: Steve Tiek, Tiek Design Group, Lehi, tiekdesigngroup.com; Furniture and accessories: Gatehouse No. 1, Orem, gatehousestyle. com; Custom precast white mantle: Stone Mountain Castings, Draper, stonemt.net; Fireplace insert: Hearth and Home, Orem, hhdu.com; Lighting and lamps: Hudson Valley Lighting, hudsonvalleylighting. hvlgroup.com; Window treatments: Park City Blind & Design, Park City, parkcityblind.com; Spool chair reupholstery: Red Fox Furnishings, Provo, redfoxfurnishings.com

Sofa-back throw: Root’d, Park City, rootdhome.com; Coffee table, leather and hide chairs: LawsonFenning, lawsonfenning.com; Sherpa steel-framed chairs: San Francisco Design, SLC and Park City, sanfrandesign.com; Throw pillows: Sien + Co., PC Mercantile, Park City, sienandco.com

SHOW OFF

Sconces: Schoolhouse, schoolhouse.com; Drapery fabric: Schumacher, fschumacher.com; Wallpaper: Scion, stylelibrary.com; Rebecca Klundt art: Terzian Galleries, Park City, terziangalleries.com; Embroidered pink chair: Anthropologie, anthropologie.com; Moroccan rug: Regency Royale, SLC, regencyroyale.com; Bunks: Ben Manheimer, North North, SLC, northnorth.us

PAGES 40-45 Interior design: Rochelle Broadhead, Cambridge Home Company, Alpine, cambridgehomecompany. com; Builder: Chad Broadhead, Cambridge Home Company, Alpine, cambridgehomecompany.com; Architect: C. Kevin Coffey, C. Kevin Coffey Dwellings & Design, Franklin, Tenn., ckevincoffey.com; Custom cabinets: The Cabinet Gallery, Draper, thecabinetgalleryutah.com; Engineered wood flooring: South Valley Flooring, Draper, southvalleyfloors.com; Stone countertops: The Stone

PAGE 51 ENTRY Kilim rug: Adib’s Rug Gallery, SLC, adibs.com; Baskets: Anthropologie, anthropologie.com

PAGE 52 BUNKS

PAGE 55 KITCHEN Saam beads by artist Stefani Kimche: Park City Collective, Park City, saambeads.com; Stone

countertops: The Stone Collection, SLC, thestonecollection.com

A CLEAR VISION PAGES 58-69 Photographer: Scot Zimmerman, scotzimmermanphotography.com; Interior Design: Kristine Rocke, K. Rocke Interior Design, SLC, krockedesign.com; Architectural Designer: Ron Lee, Lee Design Group, Park City, leedesigngroupllc.com; Contractor: Mike McNulty, McNulty Construction Company, Park City, mcnultyconstructionco.com; Furnishings and Fixtures: K. Rocke Interior Design, SLC, krockedesign.com; Custom Kitchen Cabinets: Carriage House Mill, Orem, carriagehousecabinets. com; Custom Built-ins: Bradshaw Design, SLC, bradshawfurniture.com

DEVINE INSPIRATION PAGES 72-81 Photographer: Lindsay Salazar, lindsaysalazar.com; Interior Design: House of Jade Interiors, South Jordan, houseofjadeinteriors.com; Builder: Holmes Homes, Sandy, holmeshomes.com; Detailed product lists: “Making a House a Home,” Brad and Hailey Devine, youtube.com

IN GRAND STYLE PAGES 82-93 Photographer: Rebekah Westover, rebekahwestover. com; Interior Design: Marissa Pope, Marissa Pope Interior Design, Salem, @marissapopedesign; Builder: Davies Design Build, Lehi, daviesdesignbuild.com; Architect: Harris Architecture, Orem, harris-architecture.com; Landscape Design: Ginger Belnap-Jones, Meadow Brook Design, American Fork, meadowbrook-design. com; labor/installation: Green Forest Landscaping, Pleasant Grove, greenforestlandscapingut.com; Custom/Built-In Cabinetry: Anvil Companies, Sandy, anvilcompanies.com; Flooring: Castle Rock Interior Solutions LLC, Orem, 801-224-0602; Countertop stone: The Stone Shop, Lindon, thestoneshoputah. com; Interior and front exterior doors: Columbia Millworks, Vineyard, columbiamillworks.com; Upholstery and custom furniture: Red Fox Furnishings, Provo, redfoxfurnishings.com; Entry millwork and handrail: RJ Lewis Inc., Mapleton, rjlewisinc.com

PAGE 104 DECORATING Brunschwig & Fils, kravet.com; Casamance, casamance.com; Lee Jofa, kravet.com; Rose Tarlow, rosetarlow.com; Schumacher, fschumacher.com; Thibaut, thibautdesign.com

Sources are acknowledgements of services and items provided by featured design principals and homeowners. Those not listed are either private, pre-existing or available through the professionals noted.

USD (ISSN 1941-2169) Utah Style & Design is published quarterly (Winter, Spring, Summer and Fall) by Utah Partners Publishing, L.L.P. Editorial, advertising and administrative office: 515 S. 700 East, Suite 3i, Salt Lake City, UT 84102. Telephone: 801-485-5100; fax 801-485-5133. Periodicals Postage Paid at Salt Lake City and at additional mailing offices. Subscriptions: One year ($14.95); outside the continental U.S. add $20 a year. Toll-free subscription number: 855-276-4395. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to Utah Style & Design/Subscription Dept., PO Box 820, Boca Raton, FL 33429. Copyright 2020, JES Publishing Corp. No whole or part of the contents may be reproduced in any manner without prior permission of Utah Style & Design, excepting individually copyrighted articles and photographs. Manuscripts accompanied by SASE are accepted, but no responsibility will be assumed for unsolicited contributions.

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DECORATING

SEEING SPOTS If you’re on the hunt for a daring way to animate your décor, consider Samuel & Sons’ menagerie linen canvas border. We’re wild about its graphic leopard design. Embroidered with colorful wool and lustrous yarns, this dimensional trim can enliven furnishings, accents, walls and windows. Available to the trade, Samuel & Sons, samuelandsons.com

INTO THE WILD: FERAL FABRICS

Armadillo in Deep Honey, Rose Tarlow, rosetarlow.com

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Denison Print in Smoke, Lee Jofa, kravet.com

U TA H S T Y L E A N D D E S I G N | W I N T E R 2 0 2 1

Le Zebre in Leaf, Brunschwig & Fils, kravet.com

Madeleine in Emerald, Schumacher, fschumacher.com

Gazelle in Peacock, Thibaut, thibautdesign.com

Marakele in Mordore, Casamance, casamance.com


Anne-Marie Barton CLASSICAL ROOTS MODERN EXPRESSION

INTERIOR DESIGN AND INSPIRATION AL VIDEOS

AMB D

801.272.8680

AMB@AMBDESIGNINC.COM

ANNEMARIEBARTON.COM

INSTAGRAM @ANNEMARIEBARTON

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