When renovating their airy Greenwich Village residence, buzzy design duo Nate Berkus and Jeremiah Brent ensured their daughter Poppy’s nursery was just as glamorous as the other rooms. It’s wrapped in soothing Zak + Fox wallpaper that reimagines a hand-painted design by Apparatus artistic director Gabriel Hendifar, and a white crib from RH Baby & Child is planted on a patterned Caitlin Wilson rug.
Two nostalgic Los Angeles hangouts
Inside a Hollywood Regency-style LA abode built by Caspar Ehmcke in 1966, television presenter, model, and philanthropist Mary Kitchen resides with her husband and three daughters Baye, Eden, and Maine. “Eccentric wonderland” is the unofficial theme of the kids room decor, designed by Jamie Bush. (Architect William Hefner and landscape guru Raymond Jungles also worked on the project.) The house features a bunk room for the girls’ lively sleepovers, dominated by breezy tulip-print fabric from Quadrille. It’s rounded out with an earthy RH carpet, Silvio Piattelli pendant, and skirted chair covered in blue Dedar velvet.
Enveloped in the same botanical motif Quadrille wallpaper and fabric as the bunk room, but in a different colorway, one of the girls’ bedrooms in the Kitchen house is balanced with a vintage Stilnovo pendant from Rewire Gallery. “Zoning the house by color allowed us to control the incredible variety of pieces and themes that Mary was drawn to,” Bush told AD.
Homey vibes in an Alabama bedroom
Louisa Pierce of the AD100 studio Pierce & Ward grew up in Birmingham, so moving back to the city with her husband Austin Scaggs and two children Levon and Poet was a homecoming. Like the rest of the Tudor-style residence, Poet’s layered bedroom exudes an attractive patina starring heirloom pieces like a brass-and-iron bed and chaise longue. Artwork and objects mingle with a Pottery Barn Teen snake mirror and lighthearted Ferm Living horse wallpaper. “As I’m getting older, I’ve realized I don’t want a room to look perfect. I find so much beauty in the mess,” Pierce commented to AD at the time.