Chapin—of Chapin Interiors in New London and Bronxville, New York—doesn’t know why the five-story brick house, built in the early 1900s, was designed with an inverted layout: the kitchen and gathering spaces are located toward the top of the residence while the bedrooms are situated closer to ground level. But from the outside, the two-family home looks like a traditional single-family residence.
Renovations—completed prior
to when Chapin’s clients took ownership of one of the residences within
the house—left the place architecturally gorgeous as well as highly
functional. “It was brilliantly designed,” Chapin says.
“They really did a beautiful job ... [and] it was all very pristine condition.”
This
allowed Chapin to focus on interior design enhancements that would
reflect the taste and needs of her clients, a couple in their sixties
with grown children in the area and grandchildren who come to visit.
The
homeowners have worked with Chapin on their home in Lake Sunapee, where
they wanted a neutral, earthy feel. This time, the wife—who worked
closely with Chapin throughout the project—“wanted a lot of color,”
Chapin says. “She really wanted to maintain the personality and
character of a Beacon Hill townhome.
The
second-floor study once had mahogany walls, which were “lovely but
dark,” says Chapin. A new coat of paint and furnishings lighten the
space. Like much of the house, the room is a mix of old and new, and a
3-D “half hull” of a Boston ship is a nod to the home’s location.
Yet
the homeowner wanted it to feel fresher, and didn’t want it to feel so
period and museumlike.” The result is an elegant but welcoming home that
takes cues from the home’s history while adding eye-catching
furnishings and tasteful splashes of color. Visitors are immediately
greeted with a pop of color when they step into the entry and see a
chair upholstered in crimson faux suede. There is new stone flooring in
the entry, plus decorative European tiles around the fireplace, and new
lighting. A bench and seat cushion made specially for the space allow
for ample storage above and below.
On
the second floor is a study used primarily by the husband. Previously,
the room had mahogany walls that were “lovely but dark,” Chapin says. A
fresh coat of paint and furnishings lightened up the space. Antique
artwork that hangs above the room’s sofa and depicts a 3-D “half hull”
of a Boston ship, Chapin says, in a subtle nod to the home’s location.
Similarly, the tile around the fireplace provides “a Boston Harbor kind
of theme.”
One
flight up from the bedrooms, the stairs come to a landing that features
an antique Empire console. The landing connects to the living room.
The
furniture in the room is a mix of old and new: the reupholstered chair
and the end table are antiques, while the deep-cushioned sea-green sofa
is new. The bench ottoman is also new, and a slim desk by Julien
Chichester—inspired by a late-1950s Danish design—adds modern appeal.
Above the desk, a Paul Ferrante cylindrical pendant light with metallic swirls draws the eye.
Choosing
design elements for the study as well as for the rest of the house
involved adding complementary layers, Chapin says. “There’s always a
starting point. Sometimes it’s the architecture, sometimes it’s fabrics,
sometimes it’s paint colors. In this case, we ended up starting with
the carpets,” which are all new and made with vegetable dyes. The colors
have a depth to them, and the carpets don’t look new because of the way
they’re woven, Chapin says. “That’s what set the tone for the place—the
carpets.” In the study, for example, “the teal comes up from the carpet
pretty directly” and is reflected in the coloring of the sofa.
One
floor up are the bedrooms. The nursery features whimsical bunny-print
draperies by Hunt Slonem. Touches of warm raspberry-pink repeat
throughout the space, which includes a day bed in addition to a crib. A
floor lamp— with a uniquely designed base—stands next to an inviting
chair, ready for story time, while a hexagonal ceiling fixture by Coleen
and Company adds a layer of pattern. “We wanted the light to feel fresh
and current, but also classic,” Chapin says.
A
second bedroom, which shares a bath with the nursery, features
azure-and-gold floral print draperies that blend perfectly with the
homeowners’ own chair, upholstered in lightly textured blue fabric. A
diamond-patterned rug in a neutral hue opens the room and allows the
other colors in the bedroom to take center stage.
Top:
In the second bedroom, azure-and-gold floral print draperies complement
the owners’ existing chair upholstered in lightly textured blue fabric.
The nursery, with touches of raspberry-pink, features bunny-print
draperies by Hunt Slonem. For lighting, a unique floor lamp is ideal for
story time and the hexagonal ceiling fixture by Coleen and Company adds
a layer of pattern.
Unlike
other rooms in the house, which are painted in a neutral color, the
master bedroom has fabric with a blue-gray pattern covering the wall
behind the bed, and a grass cloth wallpaper provides a textured look on
the other walls. “It’s a mini stripe,” Chapin says, with alternating
strips of grass and paper. “There’s a lot of texture to it.” The
lampshades on the bedside lights were custom made, and two small Swedish
antique benches anchor the end of the bed. Sliding doors to the left of
the bed open to the closet. This style is a good choice for a room that
isn’t overly large, Chapin says, thanks to the minimal infringement on
floor space. Window treatments in a natural fiber softly filter outside
light.
One flight up
from the bedrooms, the stairs come to a landing that features an antique
Empire console table with richly colored, stripey wood and a mirrored
back underneath, framed above by antique sconces.
“Many houses on Beacon Hill had this kind of a console table or period
table,” Chapin says. Regardless, though, “there’s always a good place
for an antique,” she says. “It looks different from something that just
came out of a showroom or any other retail store. I feel pretty strongly
about incorporating pieces with some character and patina into all
residences. If it’s a modern residence, I think, ‘What can be better
than an old wood table or a sideboard that’s one hundred, two hundred
years old?’ It just adds such personality and character to a space.”
The
landing connects to the living room, with its striking floral rug in
aubergine, a color that is repeated in varying shades throughout the
room. In designing this space, “we definitely went in a more bold
direction,” Chapin says. The sofa is upholstered in a tweed-like,
twotoned fabric by Pierre Frey, with a blue velvetcovered chair nearby.
Across from the sofa, two matching chairs are Swedish antiques, each
reupholstered in two colors—one on the interior and another on the
exterior—that seamlessly mesh with the color palette in the room. A
small antique chest is at one end of the sofa, and an iron coffee table
made by McLain Wiesand centers the space.
The
wall behind the bed in the master bedroom is covered with a blue-gray
patterned fabric, and a grass cloth wallpaper creates a textured look on
the other walls.
A
round solid-looking eagle mirror—another antique-shop find—hangs above
the fireplace and provides a traditional counterpoint to the more
contemporary furnishings in the room. The sconces above the fireplace
are by Urban Electric. “They seemed perfect to me” because they have an
antique look, Chapin says, “but they’re not antiques.” Clear glass on
the bottom third and frosted glass on the top two-thirds of each sconce
add visual interest.
The
Roman shades in the room seemed a perfect choice for an area that
doesn’t require privacy, given its fourth-floor location. “I like to try
different scale fabrics or stripes,” Chapin says. With the big, bold
flowers on the floor, “We wanted the window treatments to be equal to
the rug,” she says. “I like there to be a play of textures and scale and
pattern and stripes and that kind of thing.”
On the fourth floor, the rooms are above the tree canopy with “gorgeous
light,” Chapin says. In general, however, she avoided burdening the home
with heavy draperies. “We did minimal window treatments just because we
wanted it to feel light. Some of the rooms aren’t terribly large or
they were down low, so there was a little less light.” Wooden blinds in
some of the windows provide privacy where needed.
Stepping
through an archway at one end of the living room leads to a sitting
area, where the living room sconces and window treatments make a second
appearance. “When you are in the space, you are separated [from the
living room] by an arch. But they’re so related, so the colors are
slightly different—there is a little bit more purple in the living room.
But [in the window] shade fabric there’s aubergine, there’s a raspberry
pink, and kind of a more neutral bluey-gray color in that stripe, so it
kind of ties both rooms together.”
Right:
Chapin updated the kitchen with oval pendant lights made with white
glass and a finish that echoes the dark kitchen counters. To create more
practical space, a banquette is now located between the dining table
and a peninsula in the kitchen.
The
rug here is fairly traditional in style but with a contemporary twist.
“It’s not a very rigid or Oriental or Asian pattern,” Chapin says. “The
irregularity in the pattern—it’s not a hard outline—adds a lot of
intrigue to it. ... The color is nowhere near typical Oriental
coloration, which adds to the fun and interest.”
The
mirror above the fireplace is a reproduction by Niermann Weeks, a
company that is “great at finishes,” Chapin says, and skilled at lending
an antique look to a brand-new mirror like this one. The upholstered
pieces in the room are also new, as is the oval coffee table, made of
metal with a painted finish. Two small end tables—both antiques but in
different rounded styles and finishes—complement each other without
being matchy. The two coffee tables and the Keith Fritz dining table are
from the M-Geough showroom at the Boston Design Center. A striking
pendant light with a geometric pattern hangs above the room.
Across
from the sofa, a chair with faux suede, raspberry upholstery picks up
on color in the rug and has a painted, decorative look rather than
stained finish. When needed, the chair can be turned around to provide
additional seating at the Keith Fritz dining table, situated just beyond
the chair, toward the back of the house.
Tucked
between the dining table and a peninsula in the kitchen is a banquette.
It provides an aesthetically pleasing as well as practical solution,
given the area’s limited space, by reducing the number of needed chairs.
Chapin
updated the kitchen with ovalshaped, pendant lights made with white
glass and a finish that echoes the dark kitchen counters. “These
[lights] were iron, and I thought they were really great looking,” she
says.
Seeing what the home looks
like now—and knowing the results are what her clients wanted—pleases
Chapin. “I get a kick out of doing this,” she says, “especially when it
all comes together.”
Designer Sarah Chapin of Sarah Chapin Interiors
With
all the planning, visualizing and selecting, interior decorating is
like putting together a wedding, she says, when you have to wait a year
or more to see the end result. “It’s always so fun.” NHH
RESOURCES
Chapin Interiors • (914) 361-1157 • chapininteriors.com
Coleen and Company • coleenandcompany.com
Hunt Slonem • huntslonem.com
Keith Fritz • (812) 675-4731 • keithfritz.com
McLain Wiesand • (410) 539-4440 • mclainwiesand.com
M-Geough • (617) 451-1412 • m-geough.com
Niermann Weeks • (410) 923-0123 • niermannweeks.com
Paul Ferrante • paulferrante.com
Pierre Frey • pierrefrey.com/en
Urban Electric • (843) 723-8140 • urbanelectric.com