gray no. 12
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DESIGN • ARCHITECTURE • FASHION • ART • INTERIORS
MAGAZINE: pacific northwest design
™
MadeHere
Kitchen + Bath ideas Tranquil bath in Portland; Crown jewel kitchen in Vancouver, B.C.; Plus, stove + sink ideas
Global designersinspired by nature:
Joel Berman Glass + 3form’s LightArt
Designed.
IN STOCK AND READY FOR DELIVERY: Hunter 100” Sofa ($3090) $2295 and Hunter Chair ($1760) $1295 in boulevard-deep blue, a sumptuous velvet, Axel Chair in caldera-slate gray, a textured chenille ($1920) $1425, Muffet Tuffet in black & white hair-on-hide leather ($1370) $975, Manning Cocktail Table $1680, Manning Side Table $930, Manning 3 Drawer Side Table $1245, Manning Bar $1620, Lincoln Log Table in sterling $370, Gibson Table in sugar $370, Powershag Rug 8’ x 10’ in natural $1750, Richard Chamberlain vintage photography in wood frame $345, Encaustic Wall Art $375 each
1106 West Burnside Street / Corner of W. Burnside and SW 11 Ave. / 503.972.5000Complimentary Parking Validation at PMC (12th and Couch) / www.mgbwhome.com
OUR FALL 2013 COLLECTION:
LET US ROMANCE YOUA SEDUCTIVE MIX OF PROVOCATIVE SHAPES,
TEMPTING TEXTILES & ALLURING FINISHES
IN STOCK AND READY FOR DELIVERY: Hunter 100” Sofa ($3090) $2295 and Hunter Chair ($1760) $1295 in boulevard-deep blue, a sumptuous velvet, Axel Chair in caldera-slate gray, a textured chenille ($1920) $1425, Muffet Tuffet in black & white hair-on-hide leather ($1370) $975, Manning Cocktail Table $1680, Manning Side Table $930, Manning 3 Drawer Side Table $1245, Manning Bar $1620, Lincoln Log Table in sterling $370, Gibson Table in sugar $370, Powershag Rug 8’ x 10’ in natural $1750, Richard Chamberlain vintage photography in wood frame $345, Encaustic Wall Art $375 each
1106 West Burnside Street / Corner of W. Burnside and SW 11 Ave. / 503.972.5000Complimentary Parking Validation at PMC (12th and Couch) / www.mgbwhome.com
OUR FALL 2013 COLLECTION:
LET US ROMANCE YOUA SEDUCTIVE MIX OF PROVOCATIVE SHAPES,
TEMPTING TEXTILES & ALLURING FINISHES
Hammer Hand GRAY-1 2013 02 08.indd 1 2013. 02. 08. 18:03:44
Aireloom
Baker
Councill
Dedon
Guy Chaddock
Hancock & Moore
Hickory Chair
Stickley
Dave Masin playing with
his kids.
Where fun happens.
10708 Main Street, Bellevue, WA | 425.450.9999www.masins.com
Masins Furniture @masinsfurnitureFour generations of
furnishing Northwest homes
6 GRAY issUe no. twelve
contentsDepartments
8 Hello No rules.
12 News
16 Interiors The new Stoneburner restaurant is a collected mélange of furnishings and materials from around the world.
20 Ask We ask four brilliant designers, “How’d you get that gig?”
24 Décor The chill is on. Cozy fall and holiday accessories to warm up your home and your spirits.
28 Shopping The holidays are coming up—here are ideas for hostess gifts, and a few secret stores worth shopping.
32 Bath Exuding “escape” with a tropical koi pond, rich brown walls clad in porcelain, and a gentle stream filling the tub from above.
35 Kitchen Destined to be a crown jewel, a B.C. kitchen takes its cue from the Italians with smooth finishes of lacquer, glass, and stainless steel.
36 Round Up We found a handful of knockout kitchen ranges and bathroom sinks, then asked the pros to pick out their faves.
44 Fashion From the runway to throw pillows, fashion trends influence décor. Plus, local designers pull out their best tote bags and sweaters for fall.
66 Renovate Form-meets-function-meets-effect at a creative furniture design studio by SkB Architects.
70 Who Meet artist Joel Berman— a pioneering force in the architectural glass industry.
72 Made Here Seattle-made fixtures light up buildings worldwide, by 3Form’s LightArt, helmed by ryan Smith and Ahna Holder.
October–November.13 §
GRAY issUe no. twelve 7
contentsFeatures
74 Architecture Branded in yellow, office space reinterpreted by BUILD LLC; Allied Works Architecture designs Sokol Blosser’s tasting room; Jeremy Miller Architects beaming in yellow; Mithun- designed marine shop.
79 Resources Design resources from the issue.
82 Zodiac Design finds for the Libra and Scorpio in all of us.
50 Into the Light Nestled in a neighborhood known for traditional houses, a young Seattle family lives in a modern one with spacious, loftlike interiors designed by replinger Hossner Osolin Architects and Lisa Staton Design.
58 Gorge-ous With panoramic views up and down the Columbia River, the glassy Elements residence designed by William Kaven Architecture makes tranquility a spectator sport.
Visit graymag.net to subscribe.
✤On the Cover
From any point in the Mosier, Oregon, house—designed by William Kaven Architects—
there's floor-to-ceiling glass. Everything is focused on the
unbelievable view.
See PAGe fifty–eightWritten by
BRiAn LiBBY
Photographed by JeRemY BitteRmAnn
8 GRAY issUe no. twelve
hel
lo
alex hayden
When it comes to decorating a space, interior designer and artist Michelle Elzay once said, “There are no rules!” Such a simple statement, and one that some of the freshest and most creative designers have embraced as part of their design philosophy. Elzay may be a New Yorker, but I think this applies to the design scene here in the Pacific Northwest.
As designers here know, there are no rules, but there has to be an awareness of what works and what doesn’t. An understanding of composition and scale. It is evident when projects are grounded in these concepts, but finished with their own unique and consistent style. This is what makes us at GRAY see a project and know immediately that we’d want to feature it.
In this issue, we decided to show you a no-rules kitchen and bathroom, as well as appliances and fixtures to consider for your own kitchens and baths. Our Portland bathroom by Libby Holah of HOLAH Design + Architecture has an in-ceiling waterfall-inspired shower that turns the entire space into a spalike atmosphere, while our Vancouver, B.C., kitchen by Sharon Bortolotto of BBA Design Consultants features a sleek, curved, Italian-designed steel counter on the island.
Small but thoughtful details such as these would make these projects stand out in any crowd, and yet, they are both very Northwest: In the bathroom, pocket doors open to a covered outdoor space with a koi pond; in the kitchen, a palette of gray, black, and white allows for the addition of either neutral or colorful accents.
This time of year is always busy. Whatever your plans are for autumn, we wish you a cozy time luxuriating in your bath, cooking in your kitchen, and spending time with the people you love. Cheers to the season!
rachel@graymag.net
xoxo, Rachel
GRAY issUe no. twelve 9
Classic Contemporary Home Furnishings Chilton table $2699; Jansen chair $379; Anders
cabinet $3399; all items priced as shown.
Visit us at University Village
Order our free catalog with over 250 pages of inspiration. roomandboard.com | 800.952.8455
rnb_graymag_octnov13.indd 1 8/29/13 9:25 PM
Ben Trogdon Architectsbentrogdonarchitects.com
Coates Design Architectscoatesdesign.com
Coop15coop15.com
Duncan McRoberts Associatesmcroberts-associates.com
Chris Pardo Design: Elemental Architectureelementalarchitecture.com
FabCabfabcab.com
Gelotte Hommasgelottehommas.com
These architecture and design firms are doing outstanding work in this region with thoughtful, beautiful design solutions. They also sponsor GRAY and our effort to support the greater design community throughout the Pacific Northwest. Please contact them for your next project. Visit their portfolios at graymag.net or link directly to their sites to learn more.
architectsPacific Northwest
Johnson Squared Architectsjohnsonsquared.com
KASA Architecturekasaarchitecture.com
Nathan Good ArchitectsNathanGoodArchitects.com
GRAY issUe no. twelve 11
™
PublisherCreative DirectorShAwn wiLLiAmS
shawn@graymag.net
EditorRAcheL GALLAheR
rachel@graymag.net
Managing EditorLindSeY m. RoBeRtS
Style DirectorStAcY kendALL
Associate Style EditornicoLe munSon
Garden EditordeBRA PRinZinG
Contributors
JeRemY BitteRmAnn,
hAnk dRew, RAcheL eGGeRS,
ALex hAYden, BRiAn LiBBY,
dAVid PAPAZiAn,
hiLLARY RieLLY
no. 12. copyright ©2013. Published bimonthly (DEC, FEB, APR, JUNE, AUG, OCT) by gray Media, LLC. All rights reserved. Permission to reprint or quote excerpts granted by written request only. While every attempt has been made, gray cannot guarantee the legality, completeness, or accuracy of the information presented and accepts no warranty or responsibility for such. gray is not responsible for loss, damage or other injury to unsolicited manuscripts, photography, art or any other un-solicited material. Unsolicited material will not be returned unless accompanied by a self-addressed stamped enve-lope. If submitting material, do not send originals unless specifically requested to do so by gray in writing.
POSTMASTER: Send address changes to gray, 19410 Hwy 99, Ste. A #207, Lynnwood, WA 98036. Subscriptions $30 US for one-year; $50 US for two-years.
Subscribe online at graymag.net
Account ExecutiveseRicA cLemeSon erica@graymag.net
kim Schmidt kim@graymag.net
RikkA SeiBeRt rikka@graymag.net
SubscriptionsGRAYmAG.net
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➥
Best Practice Architecture & Design
Bosworth Hoedemaker
brendon farrell architect
Callison
chadbourne + doss architects
DeForest Architects
eggleston|Farkas Architects
Giulietti/Schouten AIA Architects
architects
JeRemY BitteRmAnnbittermannphotography.com
ALex hAYdenalexhayden.com
hAnk dRewhankdrew.com RAcheL eGGeRS
BRiAn LiBBYportlandarchitecture.com
hiLLARY RieLLY
dA
Vid
PA
PAZ
iAn
papa
zian
phot
o.co
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Portland Design Festival
GRAY is proud to be an official sponsor of the annual citywide Portland Design Festival (formerly known as the Portland Architecture + Design Festival). Kicking off with an opening night party on Oct. 3rd, the event continues with two full weeks of forums, exhibits, film series, and more celebrating a variety of design disci-plines ranging from graphic design to architec-ture and urban planning. Hightlights include a photography exhibit of natural and built environ-ments (featuring GRAY’s David Papazian); a debate on the future Michael Graves’s Portland Building (which ushered in Postmodernism), and a juried design competition for Street Seats—curbside parking space converted into a pop-up living room. One innovative design will receive the GRAY Award. You won’t want to miss a single activity of the event hosted by the Center for Architecture (home of AIA Portland and AIA Oregon).
See full schedule of events at portlanddesignfestival.org
new
s
event season
Written by LindSeY m. RoBeRtS
Cheers to architect Jim Olson of Seattle’s
Olson Kundig Architects, who was chosen
as the 2013 rainier Club Laureate, following
egan and jazz singer ernestine Anderson.
other storied recipients including writer Timothy
SEATTLE
INawardsAll designers in all types of built-design fields—interiors, architecture, industrial—will want to watch the winners of the International Interior Design Association’s Northern Pacific Chapter’s INawards. All of our favorite regions are represented: Alaska, Idaho, Washington, Alberta, and British Columbia.
Tickets: iida-northernpacific.org
7oct
3oct
18–
GRAY issUe no. twelve 13
Presenting the black-tie-optional tuxedo sofa.The Goodland Collection by Milo Baughman.
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Call to request our free catalog. | © 2013 Design Within Reach, Inc.
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14 GRAY issUe no. twelve
PORTLAND, October 3–6
Serving Up StyleTwenty-four design teams from the Portland and southwest Washington area put together elaborate dining environments for Danielle Colding, 2012 HGTV Design Star, to judge at the Portland Expo Center. Proceeds from the gala on the 5th benefit Molly’s Fund Fighting Lupus. Sponsored by GRAY. (Bonus: attend workshops to learn decorating tips for your own holiday table.)
ticketS: servingupstyle.org
PORTLAND, October 7–10
Design Week PortlandIf you haven’t figured it out by now, October is veritably Portland’s design month. Design week boasts more than 90 open houses (including studios XPLANE and Kayla Burke Design), lectures, parties, panels, films, exhibits, and workshops that explore the process, craft, and practice of design in the City of Roses.
designweekportland.com
PORTLAND, October 9-13
DomesticDuring Design Week Portland, Made & State hosts an American-made design showhouse, sponsored by GRAY, with interior designers and shopkeepers such as JHL Design and Fieldwork, among others, designing urban apartments and a rooftop patio.
madeandstate.com/domestic
BELLEVUE, October 10
DIFFA Glam: TablescapesTop Northwest chefs and restaurants make decadent wine dinners; designers and shop owners creatively stage each tablescape; you bid on the resulting tables-cape; all proceeds go toward the service and education efforts of Design Industries Foundation Fighting AIDS’s Seattle chapter. It’s a win-win-win-win situation.
ticketS: diffaseattle.org/glam. Hosted at Masins.
SEATTLE, November 7–10
Affordable Art FairOriginal works of art become art for all at the Seattle Center during the international event that’s only touching down in the U.S. in three places in 2013.
ticketS: affordableartfair.com
VANCOUVER, B.C., November 15-17
Eastside Culture CrawlOver 15,000 people will be crushing Vancouver, B.C., to see over 300 artists from the East Van creative community, including painters, jewelers, sculptors, furniture makers, weavers, potters, printmakers, photographers, and glassblowers.
eastsideculturecrawl.com
Stephanie Dyer design, 2012 Serving Up Style
new
s
Affordable Art Fair: Kelly O’Brien Billabong, Inart studio
Domestic: Triad & Dyad’s Apparatus
16 GRAY issUe no. twelve
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Seattle’s Stoneburner restaurant boasts a thoughtful mix of furniture, floors, and fixtures from around the world.
Mix & MatchWritten by RAcheL GALLAheR : Photographed by ALex hAYden
GRAY issUe no. twelve 17
this page: At the eating counter in the center section of the restaurant, swivel barstools add an industrial touch. Metal fabricator Chris McMullen, who worked on the metal details of the restaurant, has worked on all of Weimann and Maclise’s projects. The dark-grouted cement tiles on the floor were imported from Nicaragua. opposite: The bar at Stone-burner captures the midcentury Italian design inspiration with vintage Sputnik lights. Dark brown tufted leather stools from Chicago are the perfect place to enjoy a classic cocktail. rich dark hues and intricate details such as the tin ceiling taken from an Amish school in Wisconsin and the gold clock from a New York City bank lend authenticity.
18 GRAY issUe no. twelve
n 2008, Seattle friends James Weimann and Deming Maclise decided they wanted to do a project together. The self-proclaimed “interiors and architecture fanatics” had each done their own projects
but decided it would be fun to team up. Given their similar aesthetics and interest in food, Weimann and Maclise decided to open the French-inspired Bastille, in Seattle’s Ballard neighborhood. And that was just the start.
Five years and four restaurants later (the duo also co-own and designed Poquito’s, Von Trapp’s, and Macleod’s Scottish Pub), Weimann and Maclise opened Stoneburner: an Italian- inspired restaurant named after chef Jason Stoneburner. Spacious, well lit, and layered with antique metal, vintage light fixtures, and a stunning barrel-vaulted ceiling, the restaurant is designed to be an equally perfect choice for a casual business lunch or a late-evening cocktail date.
“We knew the food was going to be Italian-inspired, so we wanted to stay in that design box, but at the same time make it fit Ballard, which is a very sophisticated metropolitan area,” Weimann says. “We also wanted an old-school New York vibe.”
According to Maclise, the space was difficult to work with because it was so long and narrow, but they problem-solved with a floor plan that has open eating areas, a bar, and a counter that wraps around the kitchen. The ceiling over the bar features a recessed oval made from Kingwood taken from the decom-missioned Italian Embassy in Buenos Aires. Three Italian Sputnik light fixtures hang overhead, while two multibulb standing lamps (also from Italy) flank a 500-pound finial the two found on a salvage trip to the East Coast. The eating counter is topped with Carrara marble cut by metal fabricator Chris McMullen. In the main dining area, vintage schoolteacher’s chairs from New York tuck into each table. Above it all is a ceiling from an Amish school in Wisconsin. And below, custom cement tile from Nicaragua is laid in place with dark grout.
Everywhere you look there’s a thoughtful detailed touch: sconces from The New York Times, walls are also from the decommissioned Italian embassy in Buenos Aires, metal gates from Brooklyn. The blend of international items is a subtle nod to the guests at Hotel Ballard, where the restaurant is housed. As Maclise says, “We wanted to create a place where, when people show up from out of town, they feel like they were walking into something special and not just another place they could find in any town.” h
iopposite: At the south end of the restaurant is the wine stor-age area, which can be reserved for small parties, full of racks found in Paris. this page, FRoM top: White wood detail pops against a moody dark wall, and sconces from San Francisco add a hint of gothic vibe. Metal shelves top raised Carrara marble tables. A yellow meat slicer sits in bright contrast to the surrounding neutral palette. According to Weimann, the leaded glass panes above the eating counter are salvaged from a Sherman tank factory in New York. Many of the items in the restaurant were picked up on trips around the world and sat in storage for five years until Weimann and Maclise could find the perfect place for them. A barrel-vaulted ceiling features fir salvaged from the third floor of the Sanborn Building, built in 1901 and still standing on historic Ballard Avenue.
GRAY issUe no. twelve 19
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design teaMdesign: James Weimann and Deming Maclisearchitecture: Mike Skidmore Architect and Strata Architectsconstruction: Metis Constructionmetal fabrication: Chris McMullen
ask
We asked four top Northwest creatives how they got started on the path to their highly coveted design gigs. Get ready for some serious career inspiration.
careerenVyWritten by nicoLe munSon
Artist LAurA BurkhArt’s bohemian style and artistic musings have captured the hearts of Pacific Northwesterners with her blog, Love the Daylight. Burkhart now creates installations for Free People as the Northwest district display coordinator.
How did you enter the design industry? I earned my degree in interdisciplinary visual arts at the University of Washington and then got a supplemental AA in interior design at the Interior Designer’s Institute in Newport Beach [California].
When was that moment when you felt that all your hard work had finally paid off? Getting hired for my dream job at Free People [in 2012] … . The posi-tion is the perfect marriage of visual art, spatial design, leadership, and innovation and for a brand that I am completely aesthetically in sync with.
Have you ever had a game changer in your career? When I began to paint what I really wanted to paint, which at the time were abstract landscapes splashed with gold, it was a huge turning point for me as an artist. It was the work I did purely for joy.
A Portland–based commercial floral and prop stylist, ChELsEA Fuss has worked with the likes of Hanna Andersson, Rejuvenation, HGTV, and Kinfolk magazine. Chelsea’s daily lifestyle blog, Frolic!, has been recognized by WSJ Magazine, The London Times, and Lucky magazine.
Do you have a formal design education or are you self-taught? I have a degree in art history … . I’d always had an interest in photo styling, but during college, knew I wanted to start my own flower shop. I trained with some floral designers in London and had worked for different floral designers, gardens, and plant nurseries. I fell into photo styling later when I was working as a retail buyer and running a design blog.
Have you ever made a unique move that was really a game changer in your career? Starting my blog was the best thing, though I didn’t know it at the time. I was just looking for a creative outlet. Nearly all my work comes to me through the blog. I don’t own a business card or go to networking events. Blogs are really perfect for shy, creative types who don’t like to market themselves.
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GRAY issUe no. twelve 21
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A former arborist, AAroN MACkENZIE-MoorE embarked on a major career change in 2000, when he entered the design program at the British Columbia Institute of Technology. Thirteen years later, he is a senior interior designer for Mitchell Freeland Design and has received an overwhelming number of design awards, including multiple from the Interior Design Institute of British Columbia.
How did you make the switch from arborist to interior designer? Traveling around Europe in the ‘90s inspired me to consider applying my neglected artistic skills to furniture design. I decided to enroll in part-time studies in interior design. I was hooked.
When did you get your first break? After a few years mentoring under Mitchell and some of his talented senior designers, a big break came when I was placed as lead designer on an exciting project for a client who really appreciates good design, and encour-aged us to think way outside the box. …The resulting beachfront private residence in West Vancouver surpassed everyone’s expectations. What has kept you motivated over the years? In the early years, when you’re paying your dues so to speak, there certainly can be times when one feels you should be doing bigger things with your skills. In retro-spect, all that time assisting the seniors really helped spring my design skills forward in the following years. What’s next for your career? Although I’m in my 10th year at MFI, I’m still learning daily and working on exciting spaces around the globe. My next project here is a very large residence in Azerbaijan, and a couple in Whistler, B.C. h
Entrepreneur AprIL prIdE has been a trailblazer in the industry since establishing her own design firm in Seattle in 2004. Her first launch, a wildly successful designer candle sleeve called kaarskoker, turned into a company that she sold in January of this year. Did you always know design was what you wanted to do? I always knew I wanted to make things around me more interesting and beautiful … . My parents were involved in different aspects of the building industry my entire life, so I grew up around design. I knew the language and opted for architecture school followed by grad school at Parsons [the New School for Design].
This business can be tough. What has kept you motivated? You can’t second-guess yourself. When you are trying to do something you feel passionately about, you just have to go for it.
What’s next for you? I recently launched THE DRESS, a halter dress inspired by a dress I inherited from my mother-in-law years ago. My mother-in-law was about 5’3”. I am 5’10”, but this dress just fit. It’s worked on pretty much every woman I have put it on since, and men go crazy over it!
April Pride
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GRAY issUe no. twelve 23
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69276 LWC Windows Doors and More 8.375x10.875.indd 1 2013-09-03 1:29 PM
24 GRAY issUe no. twelve
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Written by nicoLe munSon
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1. Pendleton Portland Collection Coos Cardigan, $378 at Adorn, Portland, shopadorn.com. 2. Log Carrier, $80 at Filson, Seattle, filson.com. 3. Crosscut Boards, $28-$38 cad at Walrus, Vancouver, B.C., walrushome.com. 4. Horizon Plaid Throw, $159 at Room & Board, Seattle, roomandboard.com. 5. Cedar & Cardamom Eternal Flame Candle, $22 at Wolf’s Apothecary, Portland, wolfsapothecary.bigcartel.com. 6. Comalapa Pillow, $145 through Grain, Seattle, graindesign.com. 7. Silhouette Candlestick Set, $69 at The Good Flock, thegoodflock.com. 8. Zero Outdoor Fireplace, $6,104 at Curran, Seattle, curranonline.com. h
Nest.
After a long summer, the Pacific Northwest has finally cooled down. Here are a few local finds to help you snuggle up and embrace the chill.
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™ OFFICIAL MEDIA SPONSOR
PDX DESIGN FEST_REVISED.indd 1 9/11/13 8:18 PM
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Deck the Halls
1. Winter Wonderland Trees in Birch, $65 at Restoration Hardware, various locations, restorationhardware.com. 2. Dapper Animal Plates, $8 at West Elm, westelm.com. 3. Offecct Snowflakes, $745 cad at Spencer Interiors, Vancouver, B.C., spencerinteriors.ca. 4. Gigilio Armchair, $2,457 cad at Spencer Interiors.5. Austen Sofa, $2,495 at Rejuvenation, Seattle, rejuvenation.com. 6. Knot & Bow Confetti, $10 at Alder & Co., Portland, alderandcoshop.com. h
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Written by nicoLe munSon
It’s time to say bah humbug to cheesy holiday decorations. Stock up on these bright new holiday finds and be ready early for the festivities.
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pin
g1. Bingo Game, $19.95 at Crate and Barrel, various locations, crate andbarrel.com. 1. Chili Pepper Vodka, by Oola Distillery, $19.99, available at various locations and at Oola Distillery, Seattle, ooladistillery.com.1. NOBLE Petite Six-Pack Tahitian Vanilla and Chamomile Maple Syrup, $26.95 at Mikuni Wild Harvest, Vancouver, B.C., mikuniwildharvest.com. 1. “Don’t forget the dog!”Dawg Grog by Boneyard Brewery, Bend, Oregon, $6, available through various locations, dawggrog.com. 1. Prosecco-scented candle by Antica Farmacista, $44 at Nordstrom, various locations, nordstrom.com. h
What’s Dawg Grog? Malted barley water, liquid glucosamine, and organic low sodium vegetable broth.
Bearing GiftsWhether you’re at someone’s house for a long holiday stay, or just popping in for the party, a hostess gift is always a welcome touch. It should be anything interesting, unexpected, or indulgent. Here are a few ideas to get you started. Hopefully, you’ll never have to give another wine-charm set again.
Written by StAcY kendALL
GRAY issUe no. twelve 29
Be a part of the Pacific Northwest’s vibrant design scene! Here’s how you can get involved:h Follow us on our social media channels at gray_magazineh Subscribe and be among the first to see each new issueh Submit a project or story ideah Advertise your products or services
100 % devoted to residential and coMMercial design exclusively for and about the northwest. oUr talent. oUr serVices. oUr prodUcts. all aVailaBle right here.
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Seattle:Indian Summer: Aspiring Rachel Zoes and trendy Capitol Hill denizens will always find something worthwhile to don at this vintage clothing destination. Although small in both size and number of open business hours, we’ve never left empty-handed. 534 Summit Ave. E., Seattle
Gracious: Tucked behind University Village, Gracious is the vintage furniture consignment shop that you’ll find yourself describing to your uninitiated friends as “dangerous.” For one, you’ll want to buy everything—from midcentury glass-ware to newly reupholstered vintage side chairs. You might also end up confronting your neighbor over dibs on some candlesticks. Hey, we warned you. 2920 N.E. Blakeley St., Seattle, gracioush2h.com
Portland:Tender Loving empire: A record label, screen-printer, and retail shop for local art and handmade
goods all in one: it could only be in Portland. We love it because you can’t go in and not help but feel like part of a bigger movement of local design. It’s what makes shopping a more meaningful experience. We’ll call it: method-shopping. 412 S.W. 10th Ave., Portland, tenderlovingempire.com
eden: A “garden of opulent curiosities” you say? Sold. Like walking into a modern-day Daisy Buchanan’s closet, Eden has everything to decorate your life. The shop features fashion and design books, artful jewelry, bath essentials, and eclectic home accessories, with an array of Oregon-made and vintage items for good measure. 221 N.W. 11th Ave., Portland, edenportland.com
Vancouver, B.C.:The Found and the Freed: What’s been popping up all over the downtown Vancouver area? The Found and the Freed. Recently at home in a permanent studio space (most weekends and by appointment), the folks behind TF&TF have big, once-a-month sales to show off their best stuff. Vintage industrial fixtures and furniture, quirky bibelots, and amusing objects are what you’ll find when you stumble upon their next sale. 1879 Powell St., Vancouver, B.C., thefoundandthefreed.com
The Mill: Representing quintessential Pacific Northwest style, you have The Mill. On an unassuming stretch between Lonsdale Ave. and St. Georges, the Mill offers many locally designed furnishings, art, and home accessories. Not to mention high-quality vintage pieces, from big to small. Just give in to the goodness of it all. 163 E. 1st St., North Vancouver, B.C., themill.ca h
30 GRAY issUe no. twelve
Eschew the expected and duck into one of these hidden-secret neighborhood shops this season for all manner of goods. Each shop has something extra-special to share. If you see us there, just give us the knowing nod.
UponWritten by StAcY kendALL
stumble
Gracious
Tender Loving empire
The Found and the Freed
Joh
n c
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oto
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5600 sixth avenue south seattle design district seattle wa 98108t 206-763-4100 terrisdraheim.com hours mon-fri 9am to 5pm & by appointment
Visit the showroom, located in the Seattle Design District, to browse an exquisite array of fine interior & exterior
furniture collections custom tailored for the most discriminating interior designers and homeowners.
member of
furnituretextileslinenslighting
Where ideas flourish.
accessorieswallcoveringscarpetsoutdoor furniture
shade architecture
antiquities
32 GRAY issUe no. twelve
bat
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A couple of avid gardeners from Portland embrace the serenity of nature in their spa-inspired bathroom.
Written by RAcheL GALLAheR : Photographed by dAVid PAPAZiAn
Nature + Nurture
GRAY issUe no. twelve 33
Sometimes design is all about compromise—especially when two opinionated people share the same space. When Portland couple Tom Cotter and Doug Beebe, who work together in the real estate industry, decided to remodel their ranch-style house in the South Tabor neighborhood, they each had strong opinions about what they wanted for every single room. But there was one room they agreed on. When it came to the downstairs bath-room, they both wanted a space that was relaxing, spalike, and connected them with the outdoors.
“When we were talking about doing a bathroom in the basement, Tom and Doug agreed that light was really im-portant,” says designer Libby Holah, principal of Portland’s HOLAH Design + Architecture, “So we thought, lets build a retaining wall enclosed by glass to let the light in.”
The retaining wall, which is situated five feet out from the house, is made from board-formed concrete—a request from Tom and Doug to add a subtle layer of texture imprinted from the board’s wood grain. Holah designed a koi pond with water feature in the enclosed space. “They have a [second] koi pond outside in the backyard,” Holah says, “and we brought in … [this] water feature so you can hear the water running and see the plants and fish. It connects them with nature a little more.” ConstructaVision designed a teak-and-glass pocket door for the room, separating the bath from the water feature.
The bathroom itself features dark brown porcelain tile from Seattle’s Statements Tile in a wood-grain pattern—a choice that echoes the con-crete and the little natural area outside the pocket doors. A Kohler Tea-for-Two bathtub from Ferguson fills from a fixture in the ceiling in an exotic indoor waterfall of sorts.
“Most people don’t think that a base-ment can feel light, airy, and connect with the outdoors … ,” Holah says. “We chose to use the existing basement and make it light and unbasement-like.” h
opposite: Behind the Kohler Tea-for-Two tub from Ferguson is a teak-and-glass pocket door crafted by Portland’s ConstructaVision. It opens to reveal a koi pond and a textured board-form concrete retaining wall. A skylight above protects from the weather, but lets in natural light; with the Kohler ceiling tub filler, also from Ferguson, the shower becomes a water feature. this page: Woodgrain porcelain tile wraps the bathroom, and a ceiling-mounted shower-head allows the entire bathroom to become the shower area.
GRAY issUe no. twelve 35
When Sharon Bortolotto, principal and founder of Vancouver, B.C.’s BBA Design Consultants, was hired to design the show kitchens (as well as the presentation center, master ensuite, and powder rooms) for a residential development called Three Harbour Green in Coal Harbor, she took inspiration from the Italians. She and BBA senior designer eileen Wunderlich filled the kitchen displays with simple lines and subtle palettes, and created something sure to get five stars from any chef.
“I had worked on the previous two phases of the Harbour Green developments,” Bortolotto says. “This is a kitchen out of the third building, and the third building was designed to be the jewel in the crown of the waterfront development.”
The grand plans for the third building were rocked when the financial crisis hit. But Bortolotto wasn’t dismayed, taking on the high-design challenge even with new constraints.
“We focused on a lot of little details to make this project feel special,” the interior designer says. “In the first two projects, we used a lot of wood veneer, but for this one, we decided to take a more Modernist approach and use lacquer.”
In order to let buyers customize their spaces, the developers asked Bortolotto to design two presentation kitchens, each with different finishes and colors that allowed for easy mix-and-match choices.
The kitchen system featured in both suite options, called the Venus by Snaidero, was designed specifically for Snaidero by Pininfarina Design, an Italian company that designs luxury racecars. The island is rectangular with a gently curved countertop in stainless steel, which creates visual motion, as well as a subtle contrast to the straight lines throughout the space. Tall Toto barstools from Livingspace allow plenty of room for guests to enjoy cocktails and conversation.
The designers used a bright, cherry-red lacquer for the table in the dining area, while the rest of the palette was kept fairly neutral with black, white, and deep charcoal shades—except for the high-impact green glass wall, as well as pops of red for extra flair.
The full effect is one of modern glamour. As Bortolotto says, “If you’re going to go Italian, you’ve got to go all the way.” h
Ispirazione Italiana Written by RAcheL GALLAheR
CloCkwise FRoM leFt: The predominantly black-and-white palette of both kitchen choices allows owners to accent with their own colors; The sleek curve of the stainless steel counter was designed for Snaidero by Pininfarina Design, a company that also designs luxury race cars. Abstract artwork from Verve Decor hangs on the wall by a shiny red MDF Italia table in the dining area, and an Artemide Logico Suspension 3 light fixture provides a subtle curved contrast to the straight lines of the kitchen, both through Livingspace.
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36 GRAY issUe no. twelve
sink or swim
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1. Agape Lito 3 Washbasin $20,357 cad through Inform Interiors, Vancouver,B.C., informinteriors.com. 2. Coco Blu Stone Pedestal Sink, $2,570-$4,110 cad at Blu Bathworks, Vancouver, B.C., blubathworks.com. 3. Laufen Half Tam Tam, $1,950 per sink and $1,950 per base at Seattle Interiors, Seattle, seattleinteriors.com. 4. Lissio Washstand, $2,058 at Fixture Universe, Seattle, fixtureuniverse.com.
Written by nicoLe munSon
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The world of bathroom sinks got a whole lot sleeker when these new designs made their splash. We asked the owner of Vancouver B.C.’s Spa Mobile to tell us which one is her favorite, see her response on next page.
GRAY issUe no. twelve 37
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38 GRAY issUe no. twelve
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up
“i loVe the [large] width of the sinK—a sMall sinK Means More clean Up
after washing yoUr face, and for facials yoU always need soMewhere for yoUr wet towels while not in Use. also, the option
for any faUcet to Best sUit the indiVidUal’s taste [is good]. … go clean, siMple, and Modern in My opinion!”
—aManda soloMon, spa MoBile
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1. Alex Key Mosaic Tile, $215.58 to $240.71 per square foot at Ann Sacks, Seattle, Portland, annsacks.com. 2. Hammered Copper Mirror, $359 at Rejuvenation, Portland, rejuvenation.com. 3. Élitis Orient Express Wallpaper in Panama, $168 per yard at William & Wayne, Seattle, williamandwayne.com. 4. Lissio Washstand, $2,058 at Fixture Universe, Seattle, fixtureuniverse.com. 5. Kohler Moxie Showerhead + Wireless Speaker, $160.30 cad at Artistic Baths, Vancouver, B.C., artisticbaths.com. 6. Amalfi freestanding bathtub, $5,000 at The Fixture Gallery, Washington and Oregon locations, thefixturegallery.com.
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GRAY issUe no. twelve 39
Experience a gallery where you are the artist. Where you can see, touch, and feel your home the
way you want it, right now. All the latest appliances. Gorgeous sinks and faucets. Brilliant lighting.
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FERGUSON.COM
40 GRAY issUe no. twelve
Untitled-1 1 9/11/13 8:33 PM
rou
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Untitled-1 1 9/11/13 8:33 PM
CornuFé 1908 by La Cornue, from $10,000 at BASCO Builder’s
Appliance Supply Company, Portland, portland.bascoapplicances.com.
6.7-cu.ft. Electric Double Oven Range with Infared Grills and EasyClean, by
LG, $1,699.99 at Home Depot, various locations, homedepot.com.
Renaissance 30” Induction Range, by Dacor, $5,299 at Albert Lee Appliance,
various locations, Washington, albertleeappliance.com
30” Bertazzoni Professional Series all gas model, $4,299 at Ferguson Bath, Kitchen,
and Lighting Gallery, Washington and Oregon locations, ferguson.com
36”Gas Full Oven, by Fisher & Paykel, $2,499 at Albert Lee Appliance,
various locations, Washington, albertleeappliance.com.
Citeaux by LaCanche, from $12,500 at Art Culinaire, Woodinville, Washington, frenchranges.com.
Written by StAcY kendALL
Feeling a little too free range with all the options? Check out our favorite design standouts. Then see what Jonathan Fraser, head chef of earls Restaurants’ Bellevue location picked as his favorite.
in range
GRAY issUe no. twelve 41
Untitled-1 1 9/11/13 8:33 PM
SCOT ECKLEY INCLandscape Design + Construction
scoteckley.com | 206.526.1926CALL FOR A COMPLIMENTARY DESIGN CONSULTATION
Live outside.SCOT ECKLEY INC.indd 1 1/15/13 12:43 PM
Untitled-1 1 9/11/13 8:33 PM
42 GRAY issUe no. twelve
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“MUltiple oVens are great for tiMe ManageMent and
MUltitasKing. the aBility to haVe soMething liKe a griddle BUilt into a cooKtop is a hUge selling point for Me. it is a total BreaKfast
gaMe changer. thinK hash-Browns for 10 people.”
—Jonathan fraser, earls restaUrants
1. SE 2002 RF, Siematic Seattle, siematic-seattle.com. 2. 2.9.1 Big Walnut Offset Kitchen Tools, set of 3, by OnOurTable, $125 cad, onourtable.ca. 3. Eavenweave on Alcott undermount sink, by Kohler, $1,680.80 at Best Plumbing, Seattle, bestplumbing.com. 4. Elysium Garden, by Artistic Tile, available through Pratt & Larson, Portland, prattandlarson-or.com. 5. Portrait Black Platter, $34.95 at CB2, Vancouver, B.C., cb2.com. 6. Citeaux by LaCanche, from $12,500 at Art Culinaire, Woodinville, Washington, frenchranges.com. h
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44 GRAY issUe no. twelve
fash
ion
A former fashion buyer for Forever 21 and Metropark, Yvonne King now spends
her days renovating a 1930s home in her adopted city of Portland. Her blog’s tag line: “Using what I know about fashion to wardrobe my home.” How do you define your personal style? I try to focus on classic shapes and silhouettes, especially in high-priced items like footwear, handbags, and denim. Then I integrate trends through color, prints, and bold statement pieces like tops, costume jewelry, and scarves. How does fashion influence your design projects? Through color, prints, shapes, and definitely in accessories. If you follow fashion trends, interior design trends are never too far behind. How would you translate an iconic fashion detail into a home décor detail? I like to think of the walls, window treatments, and furniture as the clothes of the room and the frames, pillows, hardware, and accessories as the jewelry, shoes, and handbag. Just like an outfit, they need to go together.
Yvonne King
Written by deBRA PRinZinG
dressing the roomF A S H I O N ’ S I N F L U E N C E O N
D É C O R A N D D E S I G N
“Design is design. The medium can change, yet the principles and elements are constant,” a former professor told me. As the daughter
and granddaughter of quilters, I studied textiles in college and launched my journalism career at Seventeen magazine. And when I became a first-time homeowner, I became a gardener—quilting
had led to landscaping and floral design, and their interconnection with fashion made total sense to me. In celebration of fashion and
its influence on our lives, GRAY asked three Northwest style makers for their personal take on fashion’s role in
culture, art, architecture, and décor.
“Black and white: This trend was all over the spring 2013 runways and I am already seeing it translated in a big way into interior design. It’s primarily in kitchens and bathrooms, but I’ve also seen this look great in a whole-house scheme.”
ch
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“fashion is not soMething that exists in dresses only. FAShion iS in the SkY, in the street, fashion has to do with ideas, the way we liVe, what is happening.” —coco chanel
is a Seattle-based design industryleader with more than 20 years experience serving
Northwest and national clients. Sheridan was one of a select group of interior design bloggers invited to attend Fashion Week 2013, courtesy of Jason Wu for Brizo, a premium faucet brand. She is a professional member and past president of the Oregon Chapter of American Society of Interior Designers (ASID). How do you define your personal style? I like a sophisticated, subtle mix of texture and pattern and mainly I’m very tired of designer black, which easily becomes a uniform. I add color and pattern in accessories, bracelets being my favorite. Shoes are my passion however, and purses. How does fashion influence your design projects? Fashion design is deeply influenced by fabric selection. The designer sees a … vision and researches the fabric that will achieve it. I consider myself a textile junkie, always on a search for unique, special fabrics and textures. How would you translate an iconic fashion detail into a home décor detail? I use monograms to add a personal detail to an interior, such as on a pair of chairs for a gentleman’s room I designed. Monograms are timeless. … Used on furniture, they provide drama and personalization but don’t dominate the design.
Faith Sheridan
JayMe thornton
fash
ion
studied Fine Art at Chelsea School of Art in London. After graduating, she founded
Lazy eye, making videos and tour visuals for bands such as Death in Vegas and Beth Orton. She currently lives and works in Seattle, where she finds inspiration in the damp lushness of the city and the dark mystery of the old-growth forests and mountains that surround it. How do you define your personal style? I love pattern and print, but I also gravitate towards minimal, graphic pieces and inter-esting or sculptural cuts. Anything that is not ordinary or everyday gets my attention. How does fashion influence your design projects? Fashion is extremely influential on all my work. Sometimes in a very direct way— illustrating Dior outfits for a fashion magazine, for example. But even with non-fashion projects, the influence of textiles, patterns, and silhouettes are evident. h
Izzie Klingels
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Illustration by Izzie Klingels
Izzie Klingels
GRAY issUe no. twelve 47
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october 7th 2013SAM . seattlejoin us in celebrating some of the most distinguished work to emerge from our design community this year
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48 GRAY issUe no. twelve
Jessica Park may have come upon the 100-year-old leather that made her first “it” handbag by happenstance, but she delib-erately grew an entire brand from there: Seattle-based Ampersand As Apostrophe. Now carried across the U.S., throughout Europe, in Japan, and soon, South Korea, it is a brand to reckon with.
In 2010, after three years of working in corporate interior design for Callison Seattle, Park moved into fashion when she found a canvas-and-leather English mailbag at the Ballard Market. After her first prototype—designed like an envelope, of course—she snagged 99 more. Now, her work ranges from screen-printed hair-on-hide clutches and leather versions of the traditional grocery sack in gold—one that actress Halle Berry recently sported.
She may be in a different field now, but Park’s design philosophy hasn’t strayed much since her days in interiors, she says: “I like to take things that are commonly overlooked and transform them into something beautiful.”
fash
ion
What’s the best clothing material for the Northwest’s wet winters? The answer is obvi-ous, says Issaquah, Washington–based designer Paychi Karen Guh: cashmere. “Most versatile value-per-wear pieces should be the ones we can wear most days of the year,” she says. Her new eponymous knitwear line, Paychi Guh, comprises unique pieces made from 100-percent Mongolian cashmere yarn that keeps the ele-ments at bay and flexes with the temperature.
Guh graduated from the textile design graduate program at Philadelphia University in 1996, and then worked at Nordstrom until 2012, where she led a cashmere program. Recently, she learned a drape-and-collage design process from the Central Saint Martins College of Arts and Design in London that allows her to create the original silhouettes as found in her fall–winter 2013 collection: in the cowl-neck top, the batwing sleeve can be adjusted to flatter the wearer and the neck can be pulled up. “These pieces are casual and yet luxe,” Guh says, “unique and yet not screaming fashion.” h
Sweater WeatherWritten by RAcheL GALLAheR
Written by hiLLARY RieLLY
Creating the Uncommon
GRAY issUe no. twelve 49Sponsored By
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AT THE JANEY
October 9–13th, 2013
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The great room’s translucent quality is expressed through the play of light against the wide-plank oak floor custom stained in wenge, and ebonized walnut table from Urban Hardwoods. With their interior designer Lisa Staton, the homeowners selected a custom glass light fixture from Shakuff, ‘Louis’ Ghost Chairs by Kartell and custom sheers, designed by Staton with Pindler & Pindler linen.
DESIGN TEAMarchitecture: Replinger Hossner Osolin Architectsinteror design: Lisa Staton Designlandscape: Kenneth Philp Landscape Architects
GRAY ISSUE No. twelve 51
Written by DEBRA PRINZINGPhotographed by AlEx hAYDEN
South-facing French doors and spacious, loftlike interiors give a young family a modern home that fits their urban aesthetic.
a s Northwest natives who spent time as students and young professionals in Philadelphia, San Francisco, and New York, Whitney and Elizabeth wanted their new residence to feel
like the city townhouses and lofts they ad-mired before returning to Seattle.
They also wanted to live in a walkable neighborhood close to the school attended by their young children, now ages 5 and 8. “Having lived in a lot of houses, we realized we’d never be happy unless we built or did a major remodel,” Elizabeth says.
In Broadmoor, a gated community near Seattle’s Madison Park known for its mostly revival architecture, the couple found a two-bedroom, 1,800-square-foot midcen-tury house on a 6,000-square-foot lot.
Following the mandate, “buy the smallest house on the best street,” they purchased the modest structure in 2008 and began to reimagine it as an urban townhouse. One source of inspiration was Creating the New American Townhouse (Rizzoli, October 2005), a book filled with open floor plans, high ceilings, and sleek lines that served as the owners’ go-to reference.
into theLIGHT
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Architects Jim Replinger and Tim Hossner of Replinger Hossner Osolin Architects understood their clients’ vision. “We had a small lot with a big program,” says Replinger of the 16-month design process. When Hossner showed Whitney and Elizabeth an initial rendering of the home’s proposed ex-terior, it was labeled, “Crisp, Simple, Modern Villa.” The final product came surprisingly close to that sketch.
“The biggest challenge was marrying the desire for a modern, sleek design with something that would fit into
a neighborhood of familiar architectural forms,” Replinger explains. A pebble-colored stucco exterior, dark metal-clad wood windows with stone window sills and a zinc front door suggest a modern European villa. “Clearly, we were thrilled with what we got,” Whitney says.
Adjacent residences are street-facing, oriented in conven-tional manner with house in the front and yard in the back. Hossner and Replinger rotated the footprint and pushed the new home toward the lot’s north edge. As a result, the longer
GRAY ISSUE No. twelve 53
wing of the L-shaped residence is oriented east–west and extends into the traditional backyard space. The plusses of this design are numerous, but the great room is the highlight. Encompassing living room, dining room, and kitchen, the 10-foot-tall great room is lined with a span of four 8-½-foot-tall French doors that open onto a patio, effectively doubling the entertaining space. Because this section of the house occupies much of the backyard, it isn’t shadowed by neigh-boring structures. Another benefit is that, upstairs, the
master bedroom overlooks mature evergreen trees rather than roofs. “The longitudinal design captures the southern exposure,” Hossner says. Solar panels are mounted on the standing-seam metal roof, part of the design program that helped the project earn an Energy Star certification.
Whitney and Elizabeth asked Lisa Staton, founder of Lisa Staton Design, to translate their urban aesthetic in the home’s interiors. Staton embraced the architectural lan-guage of the project, creating a color, textile, and materials
OppOsite, frOm tOp: A mature Japanese maple frames the two-story façade of the modern villa; the zinc-clad front door and exposed steel I-beam contrast with light and glass. this page: “It was important to choose furnishings that match the scale of the architecture and the room’s loftlike volume,” Staton says. Two 46”-deep Camerich Lazytime Sofas invite lounging around a dual-purpose custom coffee table with four ottomans.
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“This kitchen is the hub of every-thing,” Whitney says. Inspired by the kitchen in a New York loft that he and Elizabeth found in the book Creating the New American Townhouse (Rizzoli, October 2005), this open-space kitchen features custom white cabinetry, basalt countertops from Pental, a custom stainless steel hood, and opaque walls of glass mounted above and beneath the frosted-glass-fronted cupboard doors. Overhead, the I-beam visually divides the kitchen from the soaring scale of the great room. A hidden pantry to the left pro-vides essential storage and keeps clutter out of sight. To the right, there is a pass-through bar, and beyond, an intimate four-person breakfast nook and “mom’s office.” This kitchen is a perfect party space, but it’s also inviting for the children of the house to perch on the barstools for after-school snacks.
56 GRAY ISSUE No. twelve
palette that responds to the “thoughtful sense of movement as one enters and exits each space,” she says.
There is indeed a rhythmic quality to the interiors, ex-pressed as a series of vestibules and anterooms. For example, the foyer opens onto a quiet transition space through which guests pass before entering the soaring great room. The shorter arm of the “L” also has its own entry area that leads to a first-floor guest suite and children’s play–study room.
Upstairs, the bedrooms are small, making way for an ex-pansive hallway. The breezy, light-filled space delineates the adult wing and the children’s wing. “We didn’t need big bedrooms, but we did want places to read and gather,” Elizabeth explains. The foyer of the children’s bedrooms is
itself a popular upstairs play area.Consistent throughout, the finishes and furnishings are
modern without being stark and minimalistic. Layers of color (mushroom, taupe, cocoa, sand, blue, and purple), tweedy-textures expressed in beautiful area rugs and comfortable sofas, the custom stained oak flooring and a custom ebon-ized dining table add warmth, while exposed I-beams and the zinc-clad front door lend an industrial wink. “By choosing the right materials and repeating them, this home feels calm and welcoming,” Staton says. Indeed, it’s as authentically suitable to these Seattle surroundings as an urban town-house might feel in Brooklyn. h
“THE LAyErING of suBtlE mAtERIAls AND TExTUrES ESTAbLISHES A moDERN ElEGANcE IN THE INTErIorS.” —LISA STAToN, LISA STAToN DESIGN
GRAY ISSUE No. twelve 57
OppOsite, clOckwise frOm tOp: The master bathroom’s walk-in shower is finished with smooth white Thassos marble tile from Pental; the home’s subtle color palette continues in the principal bedroom, where views over-look a borrowed landscape of mature trees (rather than a neighboring roof); a floating vanity with double mirrors and sinks repeats the modern vibe of the interior finishes elsewhere in the home. left: The light-filled hallway connects the upstairs landing and children’s rooms with the adult wing. Window linens and the oak floor custom stained in wenge repeat details from the main floor’s great room. Reoccurring doorways give a rhythmic beauty to the other-wise functional space.
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Gorge-ousWith panoramic views up and down the Columbia River, the
glassy Elements residence makes tranquility a spectator sport.
Written by BRIAN lIBBY : Opening photograph by jEREmY BIttERmANN
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The second floor cantilevers outward to give the homeowners ample space to enjoy the view (including a covered patio) without increasing the house’s small footprint.
OppOsite: The house is nestled into a Columbia Gorge hillside of evergreens and prairie grasses, just off the historic Columbia River Highway.
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t’s a Monday morning in the picturesque Columbia River Gorge and Chris Cocker is sipping coffee on a covered second-floor patio at the Elements house. Though his wife Debbie has returned to Portland for work, Cocker’s not alone here—not if you count the hawks and eagles that keep flying past. “They’re just floating right by your face,” says Cocker, an avid
birdwatcher. Describing the habits of a pair of bald eagles he’s become familiar with, Cocker says, “I know which trees they fly to, and where they fly down to fish. I can see every-thing from here.”
A second home for this Portland-based urban-planner- tu-rned–furniture-proprietor and his wife, an architecture firm marketing manager, the Elements residence in Mosier, Oregon, is little more than an hour’s drive away from the city
and offers a tranquil oasis with panoramic views.Situated on a small, flat portion of an otherwise steeply
sloping 2.5-acre hillside property, the house—designed by Portland firm William Kaven Architecture—has a ground-floor footprint of just 900 square feet. But this small space then cantilevers outward on its second floor with about 1,100 square feet. And it’s here the architects placed all of the main public areas, such as an open kitchen and great room, so that each space enjoys views of the river can-yon below: from its migrating birds to the crawl of Columbia barges heading to sea. “Seventy-five or eighty percent of the whole main top floor is one big room,” says William Kaven co-founder Daniel Kaven (who also co-chairs the annual Portland Design Week). “We wanted to focus everything on that unbelievable view.”
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The living room offers river views from a pair of DellaRobbia Tanzu chairs and DellaRobbia sofa (with a coffee table and rug from PH Reed). A cantilevered deck beyond the fireplace extends the space and brings the outside in.
64 GRAY ISSUE No. twelve
The outward-looking Elements house represents a departure from Kaven’s last project, the Interchange residence, which fo-cused views from and through the glassy architecture into a central courtyard. In this house, explains firm co-founder Trevor Lewis, Daniel Kaven’s brother and business partner, “from any point in the house you’re standing in, there’s floor-to-ceiling glass. You can literally just sit in your lounge chair and watch the weather change. That’s your afternoon entertainment.”
Outside, the Cubist-like façade features geometric Minerite fiber-cement panels, ipe hardwood, and stucco. As one enters the structure, a hanging steel stairway invites visitors upstairs. On that second floor, off to one side is the kitchen, with
white quartzite countertops and rift sawn white oak cabinets that not only provide contrasting textures, but are reminis-cent of snow-capped Mt. Hood and the trees just beyond. The living room centers around a wraparound DellaRobbia sofa and a fireplace built into the wall with floor-to-ceiling views of the river to either side. In the master bathroom, one passes through an open shower (clad in simple blue glass tiles) to reach a curvy soaking tub set against another window wall.
“When I see good modern design, it gets me excited,” Cocker says. “The William Kaven work we saw in Portland was about not only clean lines and simplicity, but proportion and function. It’s the same here, only I’m sitting here looking at one of the most fantastic views in the Columbia Gorge.” h
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OppOsite: The house’s upstairs views (left) are accessed via a hanging steel stairway that greets visitors at the ground floor (right). this page: The master bathroom gives the Signature Hardware Boyce freestanding tub a glassy view, with his and hers Decolav sinks.
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SkB Architects worked with the historic Pioneer Square building’s original details, including exposed air ducts and wood beams. Here, the rotating door with its ornamental skin of skeletons faces out toward a prototype work table and the light-inviting street-level windows.
Watson Furniture Group, a homegrown office furnishings design-and-fabrication company founded in 1960, was ready for a reimagining. For years, its showroom had been in Chicago at the Merchandise Mart, which felt disconnected from the design and manufacturing base in Poulsbo, Washington.
In June 2012, the company reached out to SkB Architects to help create a local showroom in a street-level space in Seattle’s historic Pioneer Square. Into the space went Watson Design Studio, a working studio lab that would
inspire innovation in designers and create evocative experiences for client sessions.
According to Shannon Gaffney, the project’s principal-in-charge and lead designer, SkB envisioned “a poor man’s version of virtual reality,” where old-school methods such as mock-ups and laser dimensional tools offer a less static, more experiential presentation for clients. The architects created what Gaffney calls “built-in ah-ha moments,” such as a garage door pivoting up to offer big reveals to clients. Designers can mock up a layout and, she says, “place the
Written by RAchEl EGGERs
LArA SWIMMEr PHoToGrAPHy, coUrTESy SKb ArcHITEcTS
Shape Shifter
GRAY ISSUE No. twelve 67
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left: On the reverse side of the space-defining rotating door, a Watson Furniture Group designer mocks up ideas on the white-board, which is also used for projection. right: A long table under a texturally compelling ceiling serves as the main meeting place, where designers collaborate and clients are invited to engage in an experiential process of design.
client within the potential environment with the spatial relationships intact, making it easier for clients to imagine Watson products in their own space.”
The studio is centrally organized with transformable, prototype office spaces around the perimeter. In the center is the work bench, a long table that serves as the primary meeting space, with a soffit lid overhead that canopies the room and creates an intimate environment to encourage focused effort. The table is bookended by the garage–tool shed on one side, which houses tools and furniture pieces when open and serves as a projection surface when closed. On the other side is the hospitality bar for espresso and drinks to entertain clients and guests, and to achieve the sense of a home-away-from-home for the designers.
In the main workspace is a show-stopping 90-degree pivoting door. One side encourages creativity as a white-board or projection surface, and the other side offers visual interest with a skin of “skeletons”—sheet metal byprod-
ucts leftover from manufacturing—laid on top of vivid red. This repurposing of parts epitomizes Watson’s value of “practical environmentalism”—doing right as opposed to simply feeling good.
Another playful yet purposeful detail in the space are the wall graphics—human anthropomorphic images to indicate use, ticks to measure vertical feet. They guide a client’s vision of how a proposed space will look by, as Gaffney says, “bringing it to human dimensions and turning it into art.” It’s a final gesture toward this apotheosis of form-meets-function-meets-effect that reflects Watson Furniture Group’s own goals. h
LArA SWIMMEr PHoToGrAPHy, coUrTESy SKb ArcHITEcTS
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You could say that glass runs in Joel Berman’s family. His grandfather was a watchmaker in Winnipeg, Manitoba, who also sold blown glass from Italy—a business his parents were involved in as well. “I grew up being very attracted to it [glass],” Berman says. “I guess at some point when I was young, I real-ized that you could actually learn the art of making glass.”
In 1980, Berman moved to Vancouver and opened his own firm, Joel Berman Glass Studios, specializing in kiln-cast and pressure-formed architectural glass in endless patterns, colors, shapes, and finishes. One of his favorite new patterns is Olivia, a 3D kiln-formed glass with curves that reflect light. His work has received awards from NeoCon, Adex, and the 2011 Carter Wosk BC Creative Achievement Awards for Applied Art and Design.
Berman’s glass has been installed around the world, includ-
ing as a collection of corrugated glass windscreens on the rooftop at the Gap World Headquarters in San Francisco and recently, in a 3.5-mile-long installation in the New Doha Inter-national Airport in Qatar that features a contemporary Islamic geometric motif printed on three surfaces of laminated glass.
But it’s not just his projects that are international. “The studio grew one person at a time and, Vancouver being the melting pot that it is, the staff was from all over the world,” he says. “Iran, Scotland, Mexico, Hungary, Japan, China.” From this comes Berman’s design-without-borders philosophy: that drawing inspiration from his globally diverse staff makes a bet-ter product and unites people through the universal language of design. “Collaboration inspires me the most,” Berman says, adding, “I love the storytelling and envisioning where you can take people with the art.” h
fusionWritten by RAchEl GAllAhER
30 years in the making, artist Joel Berman is a pioneering force in the architectural glass industry.
GRAY ISSUE No. twelve 71
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72 GRAY ISSUE No. twelve
Written by lINDsEY m. RoBERts
In a Good Lightmad
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Ryan Grey Smith and Ahna Holder steer the lighting division of national architectural-materials firm
3form from their Seattle studio.
GRAY ISSUE No. twelve 73
One fall day in 2012, a group of people went looking in Seattle’s Volunteer Park conservatory for light-fixture inspiration, of all things. One designed an electric-blue pendant in the shape of an orchid; another an iridescent pendant with hanging pieces in the shape of dragonfly wings.
Ultimately, the team from the lighting- and-fabrication studio LightArt ended up with 11 botanical fixtures sparked by lilies and leaves. It’s all part of the mission of the firm: “to create artistic, one-of-a-kind lighting solutions that are unlike anything you have seen before.”
LightArt, now based in the George-town neighborhood, got its start in 2003 when Ryan Grey Smith (the former manager of the architecture department for Dale Chihuly) and his wife Ahna Holder (of felt-Christmas-stocking fame) crafted an 11-foot chandelier for a friend. At the time, they were owners of design-build stu-dio Grey Design Studio, and with this fixture, Smith experimented with a new method of heat-forming translucent resin over welded frames.
Using the same method, the pair then designed their own kitchen pendant and took it to the International Contemporary Furniture Fair in New York. Soon after, their design practice turned into a lighting company and then, in 2008, was purchased by 3form, an architectural-materials manufac-turer. (LA2, LightArt’s newest collec-tion, consists of six designs made from 3form’s Varia Ecoresin, a material con-taining 40 percent recycled content.)
“The most fun we have at the shop is when the phone rings and we hear a project manager get a request for crazy stuff, like fish, turtle light fixtures, a smoke plume for a space shuttle, mushroom light fixtures, peacocks,” Holder says. “Because we are a custom fabrication studio, we can make anything.”
And “anything” has really meant anything. LightArt has done 32-foot-long LED dragons for a client in Los Angeles and a 14-foot section of Mars for the Kennedy Space Center gift shop, among other projects.
There’s a video of the process of making 50 dahlia-shaped pendants for a casino ceiling in Toledo, Ohio. The light glowing through the resin once installed is simply ethereal. It “still gives me the chills,” Holder says. In this and all of LightArt’s fixtures, the resin is just the mundane medium for higher illumination. h
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clOckwise frOm abOve: A bright yellow band leads visitors into Society Consulting’s “living room.” “It is the heart of the space,” Andrew van Leeuwen says, “allowing individuals to kick their feet up, groups to meet, and informal interaction to occur.” Small details, such as an editable chalkboard clock and dynamic world wall, encourage co-workers to mingle and get to know each other.
When your company is all about interaction, it’s important that your office is open and fun, but also has space for serious work. This was the goal of Society Consulting, an integrated technology, analytics, and marketing solutions company, when it needed to expand it’s office space in downtown Bellevue. They called on longtime friends at Seattle’s BUILD LLC architecture firm. “The design preserves the large open space while establishing regions for working and socializing,” says Andrew van Leeuwen, lead architect on the project. To retain an industrial feel, BUILD opted to keep the concrete floors, but clear coated them for a hip, modern look. Exposed beams are uplit for an added layer of warmth, and the bright yellow from Society’s logo appears in decals, accessories, and details, while a yellow band leads visitors to the “living room,” comprising a lounge and bleachers. “The design isn’t an object to stand back and observe,” van Leeuwen observes, “rather it requires involvement; without the people, the space really isn’t activated.”
Modern Society Written by RAchEl GAllAhER
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76 GRAY ISSUE No. twelve
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The picturesque Willamette Valley offers stunning views of orchards, vineyards, and seemingly endless sky. So in 2012 when Oregon’s Sokol Blosser winery decided to build a new tasting and events space on its 100-acre estate, it was important that the structure integrated with the surroundings. Portland firm Allied Works Architecture was brought in to design the space—a 5,700-square-foot structure that sits on a south-facing slope of the property and offers a panoramic view of the valley. The light-filled building features a wood rainscreen, decking and interior paneling on the floors, walls, and ceilings, the latter of which appear as textured angles that catch the light on a sunny day.
According to Brad Cloepfil, founder of Allied Works, “shifts in the building geometry and the striated, diagonal pattern of the cedar boards
create a dynamic interior. A series of skylights are integrated into the ceiling plane, providing daylight and enhancing a connection to the
surrounding landscape.” To create a seamless look outside, the landscape
design includes native grasses, flowers, and shrubs, and the tasting room also has a green roof. “We aspired to create a tasting experience that is thoughtful, timeless, and deeply rooted in a sense of place,” Cloepfil says. “The tasting room is intended to heighten the total experience of the wines, the vineyards, the estate, and Willamette Valley.”
taStE + tExtUrEWritten by RACHEL GALLAHERPhotographed by JEREMY BITTERMANN
GRAY ISSUE No. twelve 77
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78 GRAY ISSUE No. twelve
Written by RAchEl GAllAhER
Harbor Island, located on Seattle’s Duwamish River, has long been an industrial hub for the maritime industry. For Harley Marine Services, a marine transportation company, the location was perfect, but it needed more space. The company enlisted Mithun to help construct a new 9,000-square-foot marine shop, and a new 48,000-square-foot head-quarters building. “I knew of Mithun, and they were highly recommended,” says Harley Franco, CEO of Harley Marine Services. “They listened to our needs, felt our passion,… then they captured what we really wanted.” The headquarters, dubbed the Harley and Lela Franco Maritime Center, is divided into two rectangular bars linked by wood bridges at each level, with an atrium at the center that is open to all levels. Inside, Mithun used exposed structural steel, polished concrete floors, black locust flooring, and reclaimed wood panel-ing, while the exterior skin is composed of a glass curtain wall system, metal panels and black locust wood siding. The thoughtful design of the space, as well as the multiple levels of windows, allow employees and visitors to enjoy the views both inside and out. h
INSIDE oUT
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When a New Jersey family of five moved to Seattle in 2012, a friend introduced them to Jeremy Miller, of Jeremy Miller Architects, with the recommendation that he was interested in looking beyond the standard ‘stick-frame’ house. “The clients [had] a sense of adventure,” Miller says. “They encouraged me to show them what might be possible.” Architect and clients found a lot on the north end waterfront of Mercer Island and Miller started in on the design process, using a steel frame, “to allow large volume with minimal materials allowing natural light and exposure to Lake Washington.” The steel beams and columns— an unconventional yet modern yellow—were delivered to the site, sized and drilled, then erected all within a week. The two-story house was con-structed with nine-foot ceilings on the lower level and white oak floors throughout. Expansive views of the lake and plenty of natural light act as a neutral backdrop for the pops of yellow throughout the space. As Miller explains, “The color choice for the steel is intended as a contrast to the Seattle dominant weather and to catch the eye.”
HIGHLIGHTED
GRAY ISSUE No. twelve 79
Accent Lighting (pg 75)15794 Boones Ferry Rd.Lake Oswego, OR, (503) 699-9995accentlighting.com
Adorn (pg 24)4120 N.E. Fremont St., Portland(503) 505-7424, shopadorn.com
Affordable Art Fair (pg 14, 15)affordableartfair.com
Albert Lee Appliance (pg 40)Seattle, Bellevue, Lynnwood, Tacoma, Tukwila, WA(866) 966-2110albertleeappliance.com
Alchemy Collections (pg 43)2029 Second Ave., Seattle(206) 448-3309alchemycollections.comand 909 Western Ave., Seattle(206) 682-7575camerichusa.com
Alder & Co. (pg 26)616 S.W. 12th Ave., Portland(503) 224-1647, alderandcoshop.com
Allied Works Architecture (pg 76)Portland, (503) 227-1737alliedworks.com
Ampersand As Apostrophe (pg 48) Seattle, ampersandasapostrophe.com
Ann Sacks (pg 38)Seattle and Portland locationsannsacks.com
Antica Farmacista (pg 28)Available through Nordstrom, multiple locationsanticafarmacista.com
April Pride (pg 22)Seattle, (206) 300-0760aprilpride.com
Art Culinaire (pg 40)17721 132nd Ave. N.E. Woodinville, WA, (425) 481-7500frenchranges.com
Artistic Baths (pg ROUND UP)2835 E. 12th Ave., Vancouver, B.C.(604) 253-4003, artisticbaths.com
Artistic Tile (pg 38)artistictile.comAvailable through:Cantu Bathrooms & Hardware Ltd.8351 Ontario Street, Vancouver, B.C., (604) 688-1252Pratt & Larson Tile12200 Northup Way, Ste. BBellevue, WA, (425) 882-0707
BASCO Builder’s Supply Co. (pg 40)1411 N.W. Davis St., Portland(503) 226-9235bascoappliances.com
BBA Design Consultants (pg 35)Vancouver, B.C., (604) 688-4434bba-design.com
Ben Trogden Architects (pg 10)Seattle, (206) 343-9907bentrogdonarchitects.com
Best Plumbing (pg 42)4129 Stone Way N., Seattle(206) 633-1700, bestplumbing.com
Best Practice Architecture (pg 11)Seattle, (206) 217-1600bestpracticearchitecture.com
Blu Bathworks (pg 36)188 Smithe St., Vancouver, B.C.(604) 299-0122, blubathworks.com
Boneyard Brewery (pg 28)Bend, OR, (541) 815-9571dawggrog.com
Bosworth Hoedemaker (pg 11)Seattle, (206) 545 8434bosworthhoedemaker.com
brendon farrell architect (pg 11)Portland, (503) 235-5142brendonfarrell.com
BUILD LLC (pg 74)Seattle, (206) 382-0401buildllc.com
Callison (pg 11)Seattle, (206) 623 4646callison.com
Camerich Seattle (pg 50)909 Western Ave., Seattle(206) 682-7575, camericseattle.com
chadbourne + doss (pg 11)Seattle, (206) 860-1975Astoria, (503) 325-6999chadbournedoss.com Chown Hardware (pg 77)Bellevue and Portland locationschownhardware.com
Chris McMullen (pg 16)chrismcmullenproductions.com
Chris Pardo Design: Elemental Architecture (pg 10)Seattle, (206) 329-1654elementalarchitecture.com
Christine Warjone Original Art (pg 75)cwarjone.com
Coates Design (pg 10, 75)Bainbridge Island, WA(206) 780-0876coatesdesign.com
ConstructaVision (pg 32)Portland, (503) 287-4740constructavision.com
Coop15 (pg 10)Seattle, (206) 284-8355coop15.com
Cosentino (pg 37)19024 62nd Ave. S., Kent, WA(206) 762-8221, usa.cosentinocenter.com
Crate and Barrel (pg 28)multiple locationscrateandbarrel.com
Curran (pg 24)1932 First Ave., Seattle(206) 441-2721, curranonline.com
David Papazian Photography (pg 69)Portland, (503) 421-2416papazianhoto.com
DeForest Architects (pg 11)Seattle, (206) 262-0820deforestarchitects.com DellaRobbia (pg 58)dellarobbiausa.com
Design Stage (pg 43)Seattle, (206) 829-9049design-stage.com
Design Within Reach (pg 13)1918 1st Ave., Seattle(206) 443-9900and 1200 N.W. Everett St. Portland, (503) 220-0200dwr.com
Dress This Nest (pg 44)dressthisnest.com
Driscoll Robbins Fine Carpets (34)997 Western Ave., Seattle (206) 292-1115driscollrobbins.com
Duncan McRoberts Associates (pg 10)Kirkland, (425) 889-6440mcroberts-associates.com
Eden (pg 30, 82)221 N.W. 11th Ave., Portland (503) 222-2285, edenportland.com
Eggleston|Farkas Architects (pg 11)Seattle, (206) 283-0250eggfarkarch.com
Elements of Nature (pg 77)Seattle, (206) 229-1136elementsofnature.net
EWF Modern (pg 71)1122 N.W. Glisan, Portland(503) 295-7336, ewfmodern.com
FabCab (pg 10)Seattle, (206) 275-2345fabcab.com
Faith Sheridan Design (pg 45)Seattle, (206) 973-3743faithsheridan.com
The Fashion Group International of Seattle (pg 80)seattle.fgi.org
Ferguson (pg 32, 39, 40)Bellevue, Seattle, Burlington, and Portland locationsferguson.com
Filson (pg 24)1555 4th Ave. S., Seattle(206) 622-3147, filson.com
Fisher and Paykel (pg 40)Available in multiple locations in Portland, Seattle, and Vancouver, B.C., fisherpaykel.com
The Fixture Gallery (back cover)Idaho, Oregon, and Washington locationsthefixturegallery.com
Fixture Universe (pg 36)5601 6th Ave. S., Ste. 391Seattle, (206) 767-4003
The Found and the Freed (pg 30)1879 Powell St., Vancouver, B.C. thefoundandthefreed.com
Frolic! (pg 20)frolic-blog.com
Free People (pg 20)Locations in Seattle and Portlandfreepeople.com
Gelotte Hommas (pg 10)Bellevue, (425) 822-2152gelottehommas.com
Giulietti/Schouten Architects (pg 11, 41)Portland, (503) 223-0325gsarchitects.net
The Good Flock (pg 24)1801 N.W. Upshur Ste. 120, Portland, thegoodflock.com
Gracious (pg 30)2920 N.E. Blakeley St., Seattle(206) 525-5300, gracioush2h.com
Grain (pg 24, 82)Bainbridge Island, WA(206) 965-9302, graindesign.com
Hammer & Hand (pg 4)Portland and Seattle(503) 232-2447, (206) 397-0558hammerandhand.com
Harley Marine Services, Inc. (pg 78)910 S.W. Spokane St., Seattle(206) 628-0051, harleymarine.com
Hip (pg 21)1829 N.W. 25th Ave., Portland(503) 225-5017, ubhip.com
HOLAH Design + Architecture (pg 32)Portland, (503) 288-4203holahdesign.com
Home Depot (pg 40)multiple locationshomedepot.com
Hotel Ballard (pg 16)5216 Ballard Ave. N.W.Seattle, (206) 789-5013hotelballard.com
IIDA Northern Pacific Chapter (pg 12, 47)iida-northernpacific.org
Indian Summer (pg 30)534 Summit Ave. E., Seattle(206) 588-0717
Inform Interiors (pg 36) 300 Dexter Ave. N.Seattle, (206) 622-1608 and50 Water St., Vancouver, B.C.(604) 682-3868, informinteriors.com
Izzie Klingels (pg 46)izzieklingels.com
Jeremy Miller Architects (pg 78)Seattle, (206) 419-2252jeremymillerarchitects.com
Joel Berman Glass Studios(pg 70)Vancouver, B.C., (604) 684-8332jbermanglass.com
John Thompson Designer (pg 77)Portland, (503) 367-0920johnthompsondesigner.com
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Johnson Squared Architects (pg 10)Bainbridge Island, WA(206) 842-9993, johnsonsquared.com
Kartell (pg 50)kartellstorela.com
KASA Architecture (pg 10)Seattle, (206) 334-2521kasaarchitecture.com
Kenneth Philp Landscape Architects (pg 50)Seattle, (206) 783-5840kennethphilp.com
Lacanche (pg 40)lacanche.comAvailable through:Art Culinaire17721 132nd Ave. N.E.Woodinville, WA(425) 481-7500, frenchranges.com
Lapchi (34)available through Atelier Lapchi809 N.W. Flanders St., Portland (503) 719-6589, atelierlapchi.comand Driscoll RobbinsFine Carpets997 Western Ave. Seattle(206) 292-1115, driscollrobbins.comand Salari Fine Carpet Collections2033 W. 41st Ave., Vancouver, B.C.(604) 261-3555, salari.com
LightArt (pg 72)4770 Ohio Ave. S., Ste. ASeattle, (206) 524-2223lightart.com
Lisa Staton Design (pg 50, 77)Bellingham, Seattle(518) 955-5200, lisastaton.com
Livingspace (pg 35)1706 W. First Ave., Vancouver, B.C.(604) 683-1164, livingspace.com
Loewen (pg 23)available through Sound Glass5501 75th St. W., Tacoma(253) 473-7477, soundglass.comand Windows, Doors & More 5961 Corson Ave. S., Ste. 100Seattle, (206) 782-1011windowshowroom.com
Love the Daylight (pg 20)lovethedaylight.com
Made & State (pg 14, 49)Portland, madeandstate.com
Maison Inc (pg 69)1611 N.W. Northrup St, Portland, (503) 295-0151maisoninc.com
Masins Fine Furnishings and Interior Design (pg 5, 14)10708 Main St., Suite 300Bellevue, (425) 450-9999masins.com
Metis Construction Inc. (pg 16)Seattle, (206) 380-5997metisconstructioninc.com
Mike Skidmore Architect (pg 16)Seattle, (206) 851-9489skidmorearchitecture.com
Mikuni Wild Harvest (pg 28)(866) 862-9866mikuniwildharvest.com
The Mill (pg 30)163 E. First St., North Vancouver(604) 770-1338, themill.ca
Mitchell Freedland Design (pg 22)Vancouver, B.C., (604) 733-3600mitchellfreedland.com
Mitchell Gold + Bob Williams (inside front cover, 82)1106 W. Burnside St.Portland, (503) 972-5000mgbwhome.com
Mithun (pg 78)Seattle, (206) 623-3344mithun.com
Nathan Good Architects (pg 10)Portland, (503) 227-2140 nathangoodarchitects.com
Nordstrom (pg 28)multiple locationsnordstrom.com
OnOurTable (pg 42)onourtable.ca, (780) 460-0109Available through: Atkinson’s1501 W. 6th Ave., Vancouver, B.C.(604) 736-3378atkinsonsofvancouver.com
Opus Hotel (pg inside back cover)322 Davie St., Vancouver, B.C. (604) 642-6787vancouver.opushotel.com
Oola Distillery (pg 28)1314 E. Union St., Seattle(206) 709-7909ooladistillery.com Orling & Wu (pg 82)28 Water St., Vancouver, BC(604) 568-6718, orlingandwu.com
Paychi Guh (pg 48)paychiguh.comAvailable through Clementine 4447 California Ave. S.W., Seattle, (206) 935-9400clementines.com and Juniper3314 E. Spring St., Seattle(206) 838-7496juniperinmadrona.comand MoMo600 S. Jackson St., Seattle(206) 329-4736, momoseattle.com Pilchuck Glass School (pg 70)Stanwood, WA, (360) 445-3111 pilchuck.com
Pindler & Pindler Inc. (pg 50)Seattle, (206) 767-2492pindler.com
Portland Design Festival (pg 12, 25)portlanddesignfestival.org
Pratt & Larson (pg)Portland, (503) 231-9464prattandlarson-or.com Provide (pg 82)529 Beatty St., Vancouver, B.C.(604) 632-0095, providehome.com
Ragen & Associates (pg 47)517 E. Pike St., Seattle(206) 329-4737ragenassociates.com
Rejuvenation (pg 26, 38)2910 First Ave S., Seattle(206) 382-1901and 1100 S.E. Grand Ave., Portland(503) 238-1900, rejuvenation.com
Replinger Hossner Osolin Architects (pg 50)Seattle, (206) 933-8228 andBainbridge Island, WA(206) 842-1246, rhoarchitects.com
Restoration Hardware (pg 26)Locations in Seattle, Portland, and Vancouver, B.C.restorationhardware.com
Rizzoli (pg 50)rizzoliusa.com
Room and Board (pg 9, 24)2675 N.E. University Village St.Seattle, (206) 336-4676 roomandboard.com
Salari Fine Carpet Collections (pg 34)2033 W. 41st Ave., Vancouver, B.C.(604) 261-3555, salari.com
Scot Eckley Inc (pg 41)Seattle, (206) 526-1926scoteckley.com
Seattle Interiors (pg 36)3822 Stone Way N., Seattle(206) 633-2900, seattleinteriors.com
Serving Up Style (pg 14, 71)Portland, servingupstyle.org
Shakúff (pg 50)shakuff.comAvailable through Ann Sacks, Seattle and Portland locations, annsacks.com
Siematic Seattle (pg 42)2030 First Ave., Ste. 110Seattle, (206) 443-8620siematic-seattle.com
SkB Architects (pg 66)Seattle, (206) 903-0575skbarchitects.com
Society Consulting (pg 74)Bellevue, (206) 420-3500societyconsulting.com
Sokol Blosser (pg 76)5000 Sokol Blosser Ln.Dayton, OR, (503) 864-2282sokolblosser.com
Sound Glass (pg 23)5501 75th St. W., Tacoma(253) 473-7477soundglass.com
Spa Mobile (pg 36)Vancouver, B.C., (778) 893-3420spamobile.ca
Spencer Interiors Inc. (pg 26)708 Main St., Vancouver B.C.(604) 736-1378, spencerinteriors.ca
Statements Tile (pg 32)6140 6th Ave. S., Seattle(206) 762-8181statementstile.com
Stoneburner (pg 16)5214 Ballard Ave. N.W., Seattle(206) 695-2051stoneburnerseattle.com
Strata Architects (pg 16)Seattle, (206) 457-5657strataarchitects.com
Studio Snaidero Vancouver (pg 35)1575 W. Georgia St.Vancouver, B.C., (604) 669-4565snaidero-usa.com
Tender Loving Empire (pg 30)412 S.W. 10th Ave., Portland(503) 243-5859tenderlovingempire.com
Terris Draheim (pg 31)5600 6th Ave. S., Seattle(206) 763-4100, terrisdraheim.com
Thassos (pg 50)thassos.comAvailable through:Pental Granite and Marble713 S. Fidalgo St., Seattle(206) 768-3200, pentalonline.com
Tufenkian (pg 27)515 N.W. 10th Ave. Portland, (503) 222-3428tufenkianportland.com
Urban Hardwoods (pg 50)2101 First Ave., Seattle(206) 443-8099urbanhardwoods.com
Vanillawood (pg 49)1238 N.W. Glisan, Portland(503) 327-8065 shop.vanillawood.com
Verve Decor (pg 35)Vancouver, B.C., (604) 408-0883vervedecor.com
Walrus (pg 24)3408 Cambie St., Vancouver, B.C.(604) 874-9770, walrushome.com
Watson Furniture Group (pg 66)Poulsbo, WA, (800) 426-1202watsonfurniture.com
Watson Design Studio (pg 66)Seattle, (800) 426-1202watsonfurniture.com
West Elm (pg 26)Seattle, Portland, Vancouver, B.C. locations, westelm.com
William & Wayne (pg 38)5701 6th Ave. S., Ste. A203Seattle, (206) 762-2635williamandwayne.com
William Kaven Architecture (pg 58)Portland, (503) 806-5334williamkaven.com
Windows, Doors & More (pg 23)5961 Corson Ave. S., Ste. 100Seattle, (206) 782-1011windowshowroom.com
Wolf’s Apothecary (pg 24)917 S.W. Washington St., Portlandwolfsapothecary.bigcartel.com
Z Gallerie (pg 82)16401 N.E. 74th St., Ste. E105Redmond, WA, (425) 497-9302zgallerie.com
reso
urc
es
82 GRAY ISSUE No. twelve
Scorpio
zod
iac
GOOD DESIGN WAS MADE FOR ARTISTIC LIBRAS AND PASSIONATE SCORPIOS, AND THESE CAREFULLY SELECTED PIECES
WILL HELP THEM shine brighter than the stars.Written by NIcolE muNsoN
refined, intellectual, peaceful
Dish Coffee Table, $2,500 through Grain, Seattle, graindesign.com. h Eskayel Galileo Glass Pillow, $220 cad at Provide, Vancouver, providehome.com. h Calcite Geode, $49.95 at Z Gallerie, Redmond, zgallerie.com.
Oct. 24–Nov. 22
passionate, bold, secretive
h Film Noir book, $25 at Eden, Portland, edenportland.com. h Rose Carafe, $32 cad and tumblers, $49 cad (set of four) at Orling & Wu, Vancouver, B.C., orlingandwu.com. h Claudette Sofa, $2,825-$2995 at Mitchell Gold + Bob Williams, Portland, mgbwhome.com.
LibraSept. 23–Oct. 23
GRAY ISSUE No. twelve 83
WE’RE TURNING HEADS #OPUSREVAMPED
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84 GRAY ISSUE No. twelveVISIT OUR OTHER SHOWROOMS IN IDAHO THEFIXTUREGALLERY.COM
Tigard Showroom7337 SW Kable Lane503/620-7050
Bend Showroom20625 Brinson Blvd.541/382-1999
Salem Showroom2710 SE Pringle Rd., #110503/779-2882
Eugene Showroom110 N. Garfield541/ 688-7621
STYLE REPORT: WHAT’S NEW FOR BATH & KITCHEN
Modern & Chic New from Toto, the Nexus suite is an intriguing mix of clean,modern lines and natural textures. Our showrooms feature water-efficient, high-performance “green” products.
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Seattle Showroom8221 Greenwood Ave N.206/632-4488
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Pacific Showroom703 Valentine Ave SE253/229-7156
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