Oh So Cynthia
The Garden Within by Rottet Studio
Lauren Rottet’s entry at this year’s inaugural Kips Bay Dallas Showhouse is envisioned as a cleansing experience and a respite from the urban outdoors. The Entry Foyer is the heart of the home and mirrors the verdant hues found in nature while emphasizing a dramatic use of color that juxtaposes with cutting-edge furnishings in varying styles. In today’s world, wellness is top-of-mind and Rottet’s Garden Within acknowledges this without making it the statement. All who enter into Kips Bay Dallas will feel a sense of calm and well-being. Custom wallpaper from Trove illustrates a forest of magnolias evolving as one enters from the light at the edge of the forest to the dense green covering of magnolias. Existing millwork painted in Benjamin Moore Salamander will coordinate with and emphasize the journey inside. Rottet’s plan encompasses the drama of a living Southern garden, with custom hide rugs from Kyle Bunting portraying magnolia petals and a tiered chandelier by Fisher Weisman. Rottet’s own Fascio sconces for Visual Comfort add sparkle while forecasting the gardenscape below. Frenchman Pierre Charpin’s Stump tables for Ligne Roset and the Archiduchaise chair by Xavier Lust from Ralph Pucci accompany custom-designed furniture, including a white marble-and-glass table and a marble bench by Lauren Rottet made by Sigma Marble for Rottet Collection. An acrylic garden trellis leads the way to a window perch where the Xavier Lust chair is poised in silhouette. Below sits a white marble vitrine envisioned by Lauren Rottet as the cleansing well one acknowledges before entering into the Kips Bay home.
A stair runner produced by The Rug Company, in a custom shade of green wool, winds upstairs to the second floor where one discovers the colorful interlude below. I am most grateful to all the many generous partners who helped produce this room including Benjamin Moore, The Rug Company, Kyle Bunting, Visual Comfort & Co., Ralph Pucci, Lutron, Trove, E&D Plastics, AB Modern, Fisher Weisman and Jean de Merry.
The Garden Within by Rottet Studio
Lauren Rottet’s entry at this year’s inaugural Kips Bay Dallas Showhouse is envisioned as a cleansing experience and a respite from the urban outdoors. The Entry Foyer is the heart of the home and mirrors the verdant hues found in nature while emphasizing a dramatic use of color that juxtaposes with cutting-edge furnishings in varying styles. In today’s world, wellness is top-of-mind and Rottet’s Garden Within acknowledges this without making it the statement. All who enter into Kips Bay Dallas will feel a sense of calm and well-being. Custom wallpaper from Trove illustrates a forest of magnolias evolving as one enters from the light at the edge of the forest to the dense green covering of magnolias. Existing millwork painted in Benjamin Moore Salamander will coordinate with and emphasize the journey inside. Rottet’s plan encompasses the drama of a living Southern garden, with custom hide rugs from Kyle Bunting portraying magnolia petals and a tiered chandelier by Fisher Weisman. Rottet’s own Fascio sconces for Visual Comfort add sparkle while forecasting the gardenscape below. Frenchman Pierre Charpin’s Stump tables for Ligne Roset and the Archiduchaise chair by Xavier Lust from Ralph Pucci accompany custom-designed furniture, including a white marble-and-glass table and a marble bench by Lauren Rottet made by Sigma Marble for Rottet Collection. An acrylic garden trellis leads the way to a window perch where the Xavier Lust chair is poised in silhouette. Below sits a white marble vitrine envisioned by Lauren Rottet as the cleansing well one acknowledges before entering into the Kips Bay home.
A stair runner produced by The Rug Company, in a custom shade of green wool, winds upstairs to the second floor where one discovers the colorful interlude below. I am most grateful to all the many generous partners who helped produce this room including Benjamin Moore, The Rug Company, Kyle Bunting, Visual Comfort & Co., Ralph Pucci, Lutron, Trove, E&D Plastics, AB Modern, Fisher Weisman and Jean de Merry.