SarahKaron
Classic white kitchen + dark wood: Thomas Pheasant's kitchen from Architectural Digest
Whether he’s designing for himself or for a client, Thomas Pheasant is interested in creating a flow from room to room. For his own residence, in a quiet neighborhood in Washington, D.C., he gutted the 12-year-old structure and crafted spaces with a classical inflection. Flexibility was key in the kitchen. “I usually entertain family and small groups, so having the ability to enlarge the room by opening the mahogany doors is great,” he says.
Pheasant designed all the cabinetry. The chairs are from his collection for Baker. The mosaic tile on the walls and floors is from Waterworks, as are the marble countertops and the faucet. The range is from Wolf, at Abt.com. Sub-Zero refrigerator. Nanz cabinet hardware. Pheasant, who often works on his laptop at the round table, loves the radiant-heated floors. “It’s wonderful to get up in the morning and go down to a kitchen with a warm floor, coffee and a newspaper.”
Photo by Gordon Beall, architecturaldigest.com.
Classic white kitchen + dark wood: Thomas Pheasant's kitchen from Architectural Digest
Whether he’s designing for himself or for a client, Thomas Pheasant is interested in creating a flow from room to room. For his own residence, in a quiet neighborhood in Washington, D.C., he gutted the 12-year-old structure and crafted spaces with a classical inflection. Flexibility was key in the kitchen. “I usually entertain family and small groups, so having the ability to enlarge the room by opening the mahogany doors is great,” he says.
Pheasant designed all the cabinetry. The chairs are from his collection for Baker. The mosaic tile on the walls and floors is from Waterworks, as are the marble countertops and the faucet. The range is from Wolf, at Abt.com. Sub-Zero refrigerator. Nanz cabinet hardware. Pheasant, who often works on his laptop at the round table, loves the radiant-heated floors. “It’s wonderful to get up in the morning and go down to a kitchen with a warm floor, coffee and a newspaper.”
Photo by Gordon Beall, architecturaldigest.com.