Displaying posts from January, 2014

Slopeside chalet

Posted on Tue, 14 Jan 2014 by KiM

I thought I would share another beauty by Pearson Design Group (interior by Wick Design). This one is located in Montana and is the perfect winter chalet getaway. Not only is the exterior picture-perfect but the interior is gorgeous – cabin-esque with a bit of a funky edge. LOVE!!! 

Modern in the sticks

Posted on Tue, 14 Jan 2014 by KiM

This absolutely incredible home in Jackson Hole, Wyoming by Pearson Design Group has rendered me almost speechless. It’s an absolute dream. Whenever I talk about wrecking and re-building my home, my description is always “modern cabin”. This is a modern cabin at it’s finest. I adore everything about it. I won’t bother waxing lyrical about each element because this post will never end, but I must point out how cool the concrete porch floor is with the inset wood “rug”. How sweet would that be in a living room?! 

Blackpool House

Posted on Tue, 14 Jan 2014 by midcenturyjo

Rising like a dark tower through the dense vegetation is a modest one bedroom house. Changes of level and expanses of glass provide views that slice through the tree canopy while the house seems to tumble down the steep slope. Black cladding helps the structure disappear into the forest. A wonderful getaway, an adult’s cubby house. The Blackpool House at Waiheke, New Zealand by Glamuzina Paterson Architects.

I’m on the porch

Posted on Tue, 14 Jan 2014 by midcenturyjo

“Hi! Come on through. I’m out here on the porch.” That would be my usual greeting to callers if I owned this Upstate New York home by CWB Architects. I might just never move. A place to daydream and drift off, a place to relax, to listen to the gurgle of the stream that runs by. I think the one thing I love more than that porch is the property’s name… Bug Acres of Woodstock. Now you know the reason for the porch.

Amy Bartlam

Posted on Mon, 13 Jan 2014 by KiM

It’s nice to see some photos of ordinary people’s homes every once in a while, where the decor is totally achievable. These spaces were beautifully captured by Los Angeles photographer Amy Bartlam.