Search results for "Including texas" in Home Design Ideas
Show-Off Home LLC
640sf bungalow located in East Austin. Full redesign, including outdoor living space, landscaping, and interior staging. Home was under contract within 3 days.
Wine Cellar Specialists
An x-bin custom wine rack was included in this wine enclave, to meet our client's bulk wine storage needs.
The rack doubles as a small display area, where the owner can display a few bottles of wine or wine cellar accessories. All the racks were crafted from mahogany, in a clear lacquer finish.
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Wine Cellar Specialists
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Tradition Outdoor Living
We designed an extended patio cover to include a Fire Feature with additional seating and dining room for our client’s lovely stucco home.
Projecting outward at an obtuse angle, the entertaining patio provides ample seating options for many to gather around the wood-burning fireplace. This 42” stainless steel fireplace includes a gas log lighter for added convenience! Attention-drawing, it also features an extended hearth.
The client requested an Extensive Electrical package including a 50” HDTV mounted above the fireplace with Bose Flushmount Sound System to provide optimal sound throughout the outdoor living room. Recessed lighting, nestled in the elegant Tongue and Groove ceiling, illuminates the patio while the flood lights on the surrounding exterior highlight the Complete Landscaping package in the lawn.
Completing this outdoor living room, stamped concrete perfects this space with a beautiful, bright pattern to complement the existing stucco finishes. Though this project is an add-on, the stucco texture, paint, and trim look utterly original to the home!
Star Furniture
The glamorous transitional "Miramont" collection from Bernhardt is rooted in traditional furniture designs and gives a nod to French forms. It features elegant pieces that bring fluidity and vitality to any home. Crafted of "Flat Cut" cherry veneers with a Dark Sable finish. The dining table top is white ash burl veneers. A silver sand finish is an accent. Nickel plated metal is also used on select pieces.
Miramont 8-PC Dining Group including Double Pedestal table, 4 fully upholstered side chairs, 2 fully upholstered arm chairs and Buffet.
ST #: GP#:D291
Contact a Star Furniture store near you in Texas for more details: http://www.starfurniture.com/storelocator.inc
Ellen Grasso & Sons, LLC
Style is metropolitan - an updated blend of traditional and contemporary. The chandelier is Curry and Co. The table and chairs are custom made.
Photo by Danny Piassick
House designed by Charles Isreal
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Isler Homes
This classically designed French Manor house brings the timeless style of Paris to Texas. Formal courtyard, Landscape design by David Brothers.
Photo of a small traditional gravel formal garden in Dallas.
Photo of a small traditional gravel formal garden in Dallas.
Michelle Pheasant Design, Inc.
Scott Campbell
Example of a classic brown floor home theater design in San Francisco
Example of a classic brown floor home theater design in San Francisco
BRADSHAW DESIGNS LLC
Wow! Pop of modern art in this traditional home! Coral color lacquered sink vanity compliments the home's original Sherle Wagner gilded greek key sink. What a treasure to be able to reuse this treasure of a sink! Lucite and gold play a supporting role to this amazing wallpaper! Powder Room favorite! Photographer Misha Hettie. Wallpaper is 'Arty' from Pierre Frey. Find details and sources for this bath in this feature story linked here: https://www.houzz.com/ideabooks/90312718/list/colorful-confetti-wallpaper-makes-for-a-cheerful-powder-room
Dibello Architects, PLLC
The 3,400 SF, 3 – bedroom, 3 ½ bath main house feels larger than it is because we pulled the kids’ bedroom wing and master suite wing out from the public spaces and connected all three with a TV Den.
Convenient ranch house features include a porte cochere at the side entrance to the mud room, a utility/sewing room near the kitchen, and covered porches that wrap two sides of the pool terrace.
We designed a separate icehouse to showcase the owner’s unique collection of Texas memorabilia. The building includes a guest suite and a comfortable porch overlooking the pool.
The main house and icehouse utilize reclaimed wood siding, brick, stone, tie, tin, and timbers alongside appropriate new materials to add a feeling of age.
WaterMark Coastal Homes, LLC
Southern Living featured plan "Eastover Cottage"
Photos by: J. Savage Gibson
WaterMark Coastal Homes
Beaufort County Premiere Home Builder
Location: 8 Market #2
Beaufort, SC 29906
Nick Mehl Architecture
Exterior materials: ipe (S. American teak), stucco and hardie panels.
Inspiration for a modern exterior home remodel in Austin
Inspiration for a modern exterior home remodel in Austin
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Inside-Out Designs
The back porch on this home is a place to linger for hours! The stone is a manufactured stone by Coronado Stone Products from their Villa Stone collection, and it's Tuscan Villa in Florentine. The stucco is tinted, so maintenance-free for years! The casement windows are by Weather Shield, with a painted vinyl exterior and alder wood interiors. Custom designed iron railings and copper gutters complete this traditional European design.
Exterior Worlds Landscaping & Design
The problem this Memorial-Houston homeowner faced was that her sumptuous contemporary home, an austere series of interconnected cubes of various sizes constructed from white stucco, black steel and glass, did not have the proper landscaping frame. It was out of scale. Imagine Robert Motherwell's "Black on White" painting without the Museum of Fine Arts-Houston's generous expanse of white walls surrounding it. It would still be magnificent but somehow...off.
Intuitively, the homeowner realized this issue and started interviewing landscape designers. After talking to about 15 different designers, she finally went with one, only to be disappointed with the results. From the across-the-street neighbor, she was then introduced to Exterior Worlds and she hired us to correct the newly-created problems and more fully realize her hopes for the grounds. "It's not unusual for us to come in and deal with a mess. Sometimes a homeowner gets overwhelmed with managing everything. Other times it is like this project where the design misses the mark. Regardless, it is really important to listen for what a prospect or client means and not just what they say," says Jeff Halper, owner of Exterior Worlds.
Since the sheer size of the house is so dominating, Exterior Worlds' overall job was to bring the garden up to scale to match the house. Likewise, it was important to stretch the house into the landscape, thereby softening some of its severity. The concept we devised entailed creating an interplay between the landscape and the house by astute placement of the black-and-white colors of the house into the yard using different materials and textures. Strategic plantings of greenery increased the interest, density, height and function of the design.
First we installed a pathway of crushed white marble around the perimeter of the house, the white of the path in homage to the house’s white facade. At various intervals, 3/8-inch steel-plated metal strips, painted black to echo the bones of the house, were embedded and crisscrossed in the pathway to turn it into a loose maze.
Along this metal bunting, we planted succulents whose other-worldly shapes and mild coloration juxtaposed nicely against the hard-edged steel. These plantings included Gulf Coast muhly, a native grass that produces a pink-purple plume when it blooms in the fall. A side benefit to the use of these plants is that they are low maintenance and hardy in Houston’s summertime heat.
Next we brought in trees for scale. Without them, the impressive architecture becomes imposing. We placed them along the front at either corner of the house. For the left side, we found a multi-trunk live oak in a field, transported it to the property and placed it in a custom-made square of the crushed marble at a slight distance from the house. On the right side where the house makes a 90-degree alcove, we planted a mature mesquite tree.
To finish off the front entry, we fashioned the black steel into large squares and planted grass to create islands of green, or giant lawn stepping pads. We echoed this look in the back off the master suite by turning concrete pads of black-stained concrete into stepping pads.
We kept the foundational plantings of Japanese yews which add green, earthy mass, something the stark architecture needs for further balance. We contoured Japanese boxwoods into small spheres to enhance the play between shapes and textures.
In the large, white planters at the front entrance, we repeated the plantings of succulents and Gulf Coast muhly to reinforce symmetry. Then we built an additional planter in the back out of the black metal, filled it with the crushed white marble and planted a Texas vitex, another hardy choice that adds a touch of color with its purple blooms.
To finish off the landscaping, we needed to address the ravine behind the house. We built a retaining wall to contain erosion. Aesthetically, we crafted it so that the wall has a sharp upper edge, a modern motif right where the landscape meets the land.
Cephalanthus occidentalis / Buttonbush
Photo: Fritz Flohr Reynolds, via Flickr, licensed under Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 2.0 generic
Photo of a landscaping in Other.
Photo of a landscaping in Other.
Showing Results for "Including Texas"
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Sayler | Owens | Kerr design studio
Disturbed as little existing landscape as possible.
Photo of a rustic landscaping in Seattle.
Photo of a rustic landscaping in Seattle.
Tom Debley
Photograph by Tom Debley. Uploaded with written permission.
Photo of a landscaping in San Francisco.
Photo of a landscaping in San Francisco.
O’Hara Interiors
To make it practical (for everyday living) and spunky (to fit the homeowners’ personalities), we used dark upholstery and whimsical art in this sitting room.
Martha O'Hara Interiors, Interior Design | Paul Finkel Photography
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