It was the quintessential Maine summer house, recalls Matthew Carter. "Pea gravel driveway, boxwoods, and ferns. Green shutters and beautifully proportioned rooms," explains the Lexington, Kentucky, decorator who smartly didn't touch any of that stuff.
For many families the interiors were nearly move-in ready: white plaster walls, cotton rugs, some toile-covered furnishings. "Simple and lovely," he reports.
That undecorated feel is the norm in much of coastal Maine, where many cottages change hands generationally and without much aesthetic fuss. A combination of Yankee ingenuity and the vestiges of Puritanism makes for homes that feel more "put together" than decorated. And near the water especially, there's an accepted shabbiness: The salt air lends a gracious patina to whale-motif weather vanes but also flays the undercarriages of Volvos.
There's a real vernacular here, and as Carter's first project in Maine, he could have enjoyed months of drinking in the source material, but he had to stay true to his clients. As he is, they're southerners. Shabby wasn't going to fly for the new homeowners, a Kentucky couple with adult children and grandchildren beginning to accumulate. "They wanted to vamp it up a bit," says Carter. "They have traditional taste-art, maps, threshold for color and pattern." antiques-but also a high
Bu hikaye Veranda dergisinin July - August 2023 sayısından alınmıştır.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber ? Giriş Yap
Bu hikaye Veranda dergisinin July - August 2023 sayısından alınmıştır.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Giriş Yap
Aged to Imperfection
In the Cotswolds, Oka cofounder Sue Jones stirs an alluring cocktail of old and new in an agrarian compound, now her forever home
AMERICA'S ENGLISHMAN
From wide-eyed novice to decorating nobility: how Mario Buatta's journey to mad Anglophile draped a nation in chintz, silk, swags, and a legacy of humor and optimism
Estate of Play
MARTYN LAWRENCE BULLARD revives a romantic Georgian country home in Ireland, deploying grand artistry, craft, and levity in the footprint of local traditions
A PASTORAL PLAYGROUND
Out of an ancestral millhouse, designer MARY GRAHAM raises a new family home in the country, alive with checks, florals, and ruffles
LONDON CORDIAL
MIXMASTER LORENZO CASTILLO DECKS A CHELSEA TOWNHOUSE IN IMMERSIVE PRINTS, RADIANT SEATING, AND A WELCOMING SPIRIT THAT TIPS TO THE WILD SIDE
Minding the Manor
How are Ireland's old noble houses seeding their future? At Ballyfin Demesne, it glimmers in the forests, parklands, gardens, and a way of life that goes back centuries
Perennial Bloomsbury
The creative troupe that ruled the English countryside in the early 1900s had a muse wilder than its lifestyle: the Charleston garden, reborn here in four riotous arrangements.
ENCHANTED GLIN
Along the River Shannon, landscape designer Catherine FitzGerald grows her family's castle gardens into a living wonderland bridging generations
Portrait Mode REVISITED
A new guard of English painters leads a resurgence of the deeply personal art form, capturing faces and figures in a fresh light
The Bold SPIRITS SPEYSIDE
Scotland's famed whisky region reemerges as a stunning epicenter of Celtic craft. Single malt in hand, writer Tracey Minkin joins gallerist and author Hugo Macdonald to discover its decorative arts bloom