hgtv's showhouse showdown

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CYAN MAGENTA YELLOW BLACK CYAN MAGENTA YELLOW BLACK CYAN MAGENTA YELLOW BLACK WWW . OUR M IDLAND . COM CYAN MAGENTA YELLOW BLACK CYAN MAGENTA YELLOW BLACK CYAN MAGENTA YELLOW BLACK HGTV’s showhouse showdown G SUNDAY March 18, 2012 many local residents were interviewed. People who attended were asked to vote for the home they liked best, and the winner will be announced during the show. A public viewing party is at 2:30 p.m. Saturday, March 24, during the 51st Annual Home & Lifestyle Show at Saginaw Valley State University’s Ryder Center in Saginaw. The viewing will take place on the main show floor at the Ryder Center. Admission to the Home & Lifestyle show is $5 per person, with 18 and younger admitted free. There is free parking. The show will be rebroadcast at 1:30 p.m. Friday, March 30. Information, http://cobblestone.me/news/hgtv-showhouse-showdown, a page dedicated exclusively to news about the local episode. Join the conversation at http://www.facebook.com/cobblestonehomes The mid-Michigan edition of HGTV’s “Showhouse Showdown” airs at 2:30 p.m. Saturday, March 24, on HGTV. The show, which pits two professional interior designers against each other in nearly identical homes, features two Cobblestone-built houses located in Larkin Township. For the show, designers are given identical decorating budgets and the chance to create a winning interior design. About 700 people showed up to see the decorated houses in August, setting a “Showhouse Showdown” attendance record, HGTV producers said. The show was filmed at that time and Designer Corey Damen Jenkins wanted to create something warm and cozy for Michi- ganians who must endure cold winters. This is the living room at 3339 E. Shady Ridge Drive. Designer Michelle Mio created this fully upholstered master bed and love seat for the house at 3479 E. Shady Ridge Drive.The homeowner absolutely loves the love seat at the end of the bed. Local episode on Saturday

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Page 1: HGTV's Showhouse Showdown

CYAN MAGENTA YELLOW BLACKCYAN MAGENTA YELLOW BLACKCYAN MAGENTA YELLOW BLACK

WWW.OURMIDLAND.COM

CYAN MAGENTA YELLOW BLACKCYAN MAGENTA YELLOW BLACKCYAN MAGENTA YELLOW BLACK

HGTV’s showhouse showdown GSUNDAY

March 18, 2012

many local residents were interviewed. People who attended were asked to vote for the home they liked best, and the winner will be announced during the show.

A public viewing party is at 2:30 p.m. Saturday, March 24, during the 51st Annual Home & Lifestyle Show at Saginaw Valley State University’s Ryder Center in Saginaw. The viewing will take place on the main show floor at the Ryder Center. Admission to the Home & Lifestyle show is $5 per person, with 18 and younger admitted free. There is free parking.

The show will be rebroadcast at 1:30 p.m. Friday, March 30.Information, http://cobblestone.me/news/hgtv-showhouse-showdown, a

page dedicated exclusively to news about the local episode. Join the conversation at http://www.facebook.com/cobblestonehomes

The mid-Michigan edition of HGTV’s “Showhouse Showdown” airs at 2:30 p.m. Saturday, March 24, on HGTV. The show, which pits two professional interior designers against each other in nearly identical homes, features two Cobblestone-built houses located in Larkin Township. For the show, designers are given identical decorating budgets and the chance to create a winning interior design.

About 700 people showed up to see the decorated houses in August, setting a “Showhouse Showdown” attendance record, HGTV producers said. The show was filmed at that time and

Designer Corey Damen Jenkins wanted to create something warm and cozy for Michi-ganians who must endure cold winters. This is the living room at 3339 E. Shady Ridge Drive.

Designer Michelle Mio created this fully upholstered master bed and love seat for the house at 3479 E. Shady Ridge Drive. The homeowner absolutely loves the love seat at the end of the bed.

Local episodeon Saturday

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Page 2: HGTV's Showhouse Showdown

CYAN MAGENTA YELLOW BLACKCYAN MAGENTA YELLOW BLACKCYAN MAGENTA YELLOW BLACKCYAN MAGENTA YELLOW BLACK

Page 2 | Sunday, March 18, 2012 Midland Daily News | Showhouse Showdown

WWW.OURMIDLAND.COM

Showdown houses get ravereviews from new owners

So, which house will be the winner of the Showhouse Showdown?

Daily News file photo Mark Wahl of Cobblestone Homes

Daily News file photo Melissa Wahl of Cobblestone Homes

Daily News photoThe house at 3479 E. Shady Ridge Drive in Larkin Township.

Daily News photoThe house at 3339 E. Shady Ridge Drive in Larkin Township.

BY CHERYL WADE

For the Daily News

From the intricate interior wall paint to the antique-looking “crocodile chairs,” Karla and Scott McFarland love their new Midland house.

D e s i g n e r s o f t h e McFar lands ’ home, and a second Midland house owned by Kara Gordon, went head to head in HGTV’s “Show-h o u s e S h o w d o w n .” One designer created an old-world feel with the McFarlands’ house, while a second designer called her new style house, now owned by Gordon, “Bohemian.” Local residents chose the winning designer and house during an open house Aug. 20, and the winner will be announced on the Showdown when the local episode airs at 2:30 p.m. March 24.

In HGTV’s words, this will be a showdown between “old-world style” and “fun floating furniture.”

Cobblestone Homes of Freeland, owned by Mark and Melis-s a Wa h l , b u i l t t h e two identical houses in Larkin Township. Each was decorated in a completely different way but with the same budget, Melissa Wahl said. She and Mark had thought the completely furnished homes might serve as models for pro-spective customers to tour, but both homes so ld soon after the August filming.

The McFarland home

Scott said he and Karla had met with Mark Wahl to start designing a house the coup le wou ld have built. Wahl mentioned his company had built the two Showdown houses that now were for sale. The couple didn’t like the contem-porary house because, with two children and a dog, it was too close to the road.

“It wasn’t our style,” S c o t t a d d e d . ” We walked in the door (of

the other house) and it just felt like it was exactly what we were looking for. In terms of the size and in terms of the finish, it was warm and inviting.”

Karla said the cou-ple had looked at 10 houses before finding this one.

“It was a huge deal not to have to worry about recreating what the designer had,” she said.

The master bedroom has a chandelier that Karla called “really beauti ful ,” and she loves the multilayered, intricate paint tech-nique on the wall.

Inter ior des igner Corey Damen Jen -kins, whose company is DWV Interiors LLC in Bloomington Hills, said he wanted to cre-ate something warm and cozy for Michigan-ians who must endure cold winters.

DWV bills itself as a trend-setting design firm specializing in cre-ating traditional, mod-ern, French country and transitional inte-riors. What makes the company stand out is its ability to help home buyers save money by designing the home virtually under their eyes.

Jenkins said he want-ed to combine elegance and a cozy nature in a traditional design.

And what about the ornate wooden chair with crocodile skin in the seat and back?

“I just felt like it,” Jen-kins said. “Sometimes you see things and they just speak to you.” The crocodile was unex-pected, not the paisley print or stripe that some would have chosen, he said. “The croc kind of gave it a whimsical, off-the-beat impact or feel.”

Besides the crocodile chair, Jenkins noted the pleated bed that he added to give the feel of a hotel.

He aimed at furnish-ings that were classic, so no one could tell for cer-tain when the decor was put together. He chose reds, golds and greens that are the colors of

the earth and that have been around forever. The arched brick hood in the kitchen brings in the flavor of Italy’s Tuscan region, he said. In the kitchen, there are

sage green and cognac-colored cabinets mixed together in the scheme. That gives the furnish-ings a “collected-over-time look,” he said.

“ W h e n y o u w a l k

inside, you just don’t know how long it’s been there,” he said.

The Gordon home

Gordon, who chose the

modern house, didn’t know much about Mid-land when The Dow Chemical Co. trans-ferred her here and

SEE “HOMES,” PAGE 6

And what about the ornate wooden chair with crocodile skin in the seat and back? “I just felt like it,” Jenkins said. “Sometimes you see things and they just

speak to you.” The crocodile was unexpected, not the paisley print or stripe that some would have chosen, he said. “The croc kind of gave it a whimsical,

off-the-beat impact or feel.”

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Page 3: HGTV's Showhouse Showdown

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Sunday, March 18, 2012 | Page 3Showhouse Showdown | Midland Daily News

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The home-owner

loves the marble

fireplace.

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The Daily News House Hunting team, Kevin Prior and Lori Qualls, both employees of the Daily News, toured the Cobblestone houses that will be featured on HGTV’s Showhouse Showdown, which will be broadcast at 2:30 p.m. March 24. Here are their impressions.

3479 E. Shady Ridge Drivemodern farmhouse

The dining room/kitchenKevin says: The room shimmers with the three hammered

aluminum light fixtures and hand-painted mural wall treatment. The combination of warm and cool colors mixed together really makes the room inviting. The chrome pulls on the backs of the chairs are a nice touch. The kitchen is absolutely stunning with the white granite extending down the sides of the island to the floor and on the counters. The farmhouse style sink combined with the contemporary appliances makes the room modern and eclectic.

Lori says: The kitchen and dining room, like the rest of the house, are bathed in tones of grays, whites and touches of silver that work well together. The hand-painted scene of a barren winter landscape on the dining room walls is subtle yet stunning. I love the trio of hammered-metal pendant lights and the fabric chairs studded with nailheads in the dining room. This look mimics the metal-topped table and leather/nailhead chairs in the eat-in area of the kitchen.

The living roomKevin says: The living room is light and bright with contem-

porary furniture combined again with eclectic accessories. I love the combination of contemporary artwork mixed with flea market finds. The room focuses around the fireplace and offers several seating options .

Lori says: The tiled fireplace, floor to ceiling, is gorgeous and I

love the flashes of silver on the mantel. On either side of the fire-place are upright wrought iron floor lamps with drum shades, which complement the cream-colored furniture and oversized tufted stool. The designers’ own artwork, which looms large on one side of the room, works well.

The master bedroomKevin says: The master looks like an upscale hotel suite. The

full wall of draperies behind the bed is striking and combined with the small sofa at the end of the bed and ottoman gives you both a sleeping area and a sitting area. The massive upholstered headboard with the sunburst mirror makes a dramatic focal point. The drum ceiling light fixture is a nice added surprise to the room.

Lori says: I learned I love the look of drum shades on pendant lights and the one hanging over the bed/loveseat area is big and gorgeous. This room is full of icy browns, blues, grays and creams. A wall of cream drapery backs the bed’s almost-ceiling-tall brown padded headboard, which is adorned with a really cool mirror. I love the look of the cozy loveseat at the foot of the bed and its companion, a round footstool.

KevinPrior

LoriQualls

Photos for the Daily News by Kevin PriorThe kitchen is light and fresh with white cabinets and a custom-built granite island.

The dining room welcomes visitors with a hand-painted mural.

The great room is an eye catcher and ready for entertaining around the tiled fireplace and custom furniture pieces.

Page 4: HGTV's Showhouse Showdown

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Page 4 | Sunday, March 18, 2012 Midland Daily News | Showhouse Showdown

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Jenkins created an old-world feel for this house.

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CONGRATULATIONSto Cobblestone Homes for being chosen on this HGTV Showhouse

Showdown program.

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Photos for the Daily News by Kevin PriorThe kitchen combines rich chocolate cabinets with sage green cabinetry brought together by a butcher block countertop.

The large table and chairs seem right at home in this room, and the side server offers additional serving areas for formal dinners.

The bed is incredible with its tailored fabric foot board and bedskirt. The crystal chandelier is gorgeous.

3339 E. Shady Ridge Drivetraditional brick

The dining room/kitchenKevin says: The warm chocolately tones of the room just

make you want to settle into the dining room. The large table and chairs seem right at home in this room, and the side server offers additional serving areas for formal dinners. The kitchen continues the chocolate theme with the cabinetry combining sage green into the palette and all tied together with a massive butcher block topped island. The brick venthood surround and pot filler faucet behind the range make this a cook’s delight.

Lori says: Subtly, the designer played off the sage green grids of the house’s windows with splashes of the same color in some cabinetry in the kitchen. The arched brick area, fitted with pot filler faucet over the cooktop, blends in beautifully with greens, browns of the kitchen. The dining room’s fleur de lis-inspired wallpaper has shades of browns, reds and greens, and the table is surrounded by ornate tall-back fabric chairs on three sides and a leather loveseat on the fourth. The dining room’s molding and trim are a lucious chocolate milk color.

The living roomKevin says: The combination of new furniture, antiques

and custom pieces all work together to create an absolutely stunning room. The warm chocolate tones and textures of the different furniture pieces draw your eye from one area to another. The custom wall treatment throughout is luxury at its finest.

Lori says: The oversized chairs and the oversized art work really make this room regal, especially with the textured but-terscotch walls and dark furniture, both new and documented antique. Two bench seats flank the floor-to-ceiling fireplace and add a cozy feel to the room. The interior windows, like the dining room and master bedroom, are fitted with solid wood shutters. The room is grounded with tufted chocolate fabric wall boards and a large tufted orange stool.

The master bedroomKevin says: Custom everything! The walls in the master

are a custom wall treatment complete with fleur-de-lis pat-terns and rhinestone accents. The full-size crystal chandelier seems right at home suspended from the tray ceilings, and the custom upholstered headboard and footboard of the bed really give the room an over-the-top feel. That, and the mas-sive mirror leaning against the one wall.

Lori says: Again, a custom wall treatment, this time with raised appliques scattered on the wall, painted over with brown and accented with “diamonds.” The bed is incredible with its tailored fabric foot board and bedskirt. The crystal chandelier is gorgeous, and you have to see the floor-to-ceil-ing freestanding mirror to believe it.

KevinPrior

LoriQualls

Page 5: HGTV's Showhouse Showdown

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Sunday, March18, 2012 | Page 5Showhouse Showdown | Midland Daily

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Page 6 | Sunday, March 18, 2012 Midland Daily News | Showhouse Showdown

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she flew here to see the two houses. Like the McFarlands, Gor-don loved the home that became hers – its c lean, modern look with its three metal-l ic - looking f ixtures hanging over the din-ing room table and a marble fireplace in the family room.

“There’s a love seat at the foot of the bed,” she said. “It’s just sort of a nice retreat idea. I don’t know how often I’ll actually use it but it’s really beautiful. It’s luxurious.”

The color scheme is a mixture of metallic and colors that relate well: white, beige, gold, silver and bronze, Gor-don noted.

The only thing she didn’t like was a deco-ration that looked like a skul l with horns, hanging in the front hall. She took it down. “It was just weird,” she said.

Everything else was great, she said.

“It was all ready to go and I was absolutely in love with it, exactly the way it was,” she said.

Designer Michelle Mio said she created the interior to reflect what she’d been told about the target mar-ket: young profession-als from all over the world, “people pulled in from Dow.”

“They’re well edu-cated, they’re really intelligent people and they have young fami-lies,” she said.

Mio ’s c ompany i s Rariden, Schumacher & Mio of Birmingham, Mich. She liked the open floor plan and, because she imagined the buyers might have children, she chose soft carpet for the family room to make it homey and to reduce wear and tear on children’s

knees when they play there. She chose light-er tones for the kitch-en cabinets to provide contrast to cold Michi-gan winters.

I n d e f i n i n g h e r “Bohemian” feel, Mio said the house should look well-traveled, just like its likely buyers who probably have traveled the globe. So she pulled in a mix-ture of antiques she found and pieces her company made.

One such created piece is the high, fully upholstered master bed with a headboard o f n e u t r a l - c o l o r e d mohair and side rails in a neutral linen. In the custom kitchen island, two sides and a top made of marble provide almost a cuff around the kitchen cabinetry, she said. Custom upholstered chairs covered with faux leather and a stainless topped table also are in the kitch-en.

Scott McFarland said having his house on a nationally syndicated TV show is cool and exciting “I get ques-tions about it all the time (from) people at work I see: ‘How’s your house? When’s it going to be on TV?’” he said.

G o r d o n s a i d s h e plans to have a party

centered around the TV show.

The Wahls and HGTV

When the production company for HGTV first called, Melissa Wahl said , she and mark thought “Yeah, right!” But after they realized this was the real deal and began working on the show, “the production com-pany was just fabu-lous in laying out their expectations.”

“It really was a great fit for us,” she said.

Wahl said the com-p a n y m e m b e r s a r e pretty pumped about the show. Yes, under-taking a project such as this was a risk. She and Mark needed to get the best informa-

tion and ask for more information. But in the end, they said why not?

“It takes many peo-ple to build a house,” she said. “Our team was totally devoted to the project … with tight time lines and a camera in your faced. It was ‘Let’s shoot that again.’”

T h e s h o w m e a n s great exposure f o r Cobblestone, but the

perks go to a wider area, she said.

“We’re a local build-er. … It’s a national

b r o a d c a s t a n d i t ’ s going to really empha-size the Great Lakes Bay Region. And it’s about time this area got some of the credit which it ’s due,” she said.

Cobblestone own-ers Mark and Melis-sa Wahl were “won-derful to work with,” Karla said. They were “very responsive” to everything the couple wanted to know or do have done, and made certain the work got done.

They’re very caring,” she said.

Scot t pra ised the company for its work-manship, mater ia l , building style, taste in the home’s layout and the “way they work with you to achieve whatever you want to achieve.”

Wa h l i s k e e p i n g mum about the show’s outcome.

“We don’t want to b low any surprises before it ’s shown on television,” she said.

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 2

In defining her “Bohemian” feel, Mio said the house should look well-traveled, just like its likely buyers who probably have traveled the globe. So she pulled in a mixture of antiques she found and pieces her company made. One such created piece is the high, fully upholstered master bed with a headboard of

neutral-colored mohair and side rails in a neutral linen.

‘Showhouse Showdown’ local episode on HGTV Saturday

The Jenkins-designed bed is incredible with its tailored fabric foot board and bedskirt. The homeowners love the chandelier.

Three hammered aluminum light fixtures hang over the dining room table in the Mio- designed room.

Designer Mio chose light tones for the kitchen cabinets to provide contrast to cold Michigan winters.

The homeowners like Jenkins’ use of multilayered paint technique on the walls.

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Page 7: HGTV's Showhouse Showdown

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Sunday, March 18, 2012 | Page 7Showhouse Showdown | Midland Daily News

WWW.OURMIDLAND.COM

Designer Corey Damen Jenkins sits in one of the ornate chairs with crocodile skin in the living room of he house he decorated.

Designer Michelle Mio sits on the oversized tufted stool in front of the fireplace of the house she designed.

Corey Damen Jenkins, the lead designer for DWV Interiors in Bloomfield Hills, Mich., uses a number of effective artistic techniques. He possesses an ability that enables him to listen to clients’ expressed desires, interpret them, and then rapidly sketch their dream rooms in acute three-dimensional detail in the comfort of their home. By drawing the space together this client/designer interaction fosters an exciting teamwork atmosphere. It also pro-vides significant cost-saving measures, helping people to visualize their project in a fresh and inspiring way.He has the unique talent to rapidly draw his cli-ents’ dream rooms on paper right before their eyes in three-dimensional detail.For example, during the preliminary develop-ment stage, a person might say “I don’t like that chair there—could we do a table instead?” and Mr. Jenkins can instantly draw in that idea. This artistic method ensures that you can really visualize your project in a fresh, inspiring way that color boards cannot accomplish alone. Some clients have even asked to have their renderings mounted and framed as a memoir of this exciting experience!He currently is featured in the Michigan Design Center’s directory of recommended designers and also will be a headliner in Judy Frankel’s prestigious ‘Designing With Antiques” series for 2011.Jenkins also travels as a motivational speaker, teaching seminars and mentoring students enrolled with interior design programs at local universities.

Growing up in California, Michelle’s parents always knew she would work in a field where her creativity would be put to good use. They never knew that passion

would take their daughter across the coun-try to Michigan.

An accomplished collegiate golfer and student, Michelle had to decide whether

golf or interior design would be her life’s path. Hands down, Michelle chose inte-

rior design! After graduating from Texas Christian University with a B.S. in interior

design and a minor in Japanese, Michelle began working at Elizabeth S. White

Designs in Fort Worth, Texas, an estab-lished design firm servicing some of the metroplex’s most prestigious clientele.

After several years of designing in Texas, the winds of change brought

Michelle to Michigan. She updated her winter wardrobe and accepted a senior design position at Joseph A. Keenan &

Associates in Birmingham . After spend-ing four years with the firm, Michelle

decided to open her own firm — Mio & Co., Inc. Working on multiple residen-tial, corporate and hospitality projects,

Michelle enjoyed the entrepreneurial aspect of being “her own boss.”

Exactly one year later, designers, busi-ness owners and friends, Rosemary Cotter

and Jill Schumacher invited Michelle to combine her experience and talent with

theirs and Rariden Schumacher Mio & Co. was born. Michelle now feels so fortunate that she works with such a talented, dedi-

cated, and fun-loving group.Michelle can often be found walking her

French Bulldogs, Gus and Gertie, through downtown Birmingham.

Corey Damen Jenkins

Michelle Mio

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