The most extraordinary interiors don’t begin with a floor plan. They begin with an instinct — a hunch about how a room should hold you when you walk through the door.
There is a particular silence in a well-designed room. Not emptiness — fullness, held in check. I’ve walked into thousands of spaces over the course of my career, from private residences along the Nantucket shore to boutique hotels that were somebody’s wild, beautiful bet on a neighborhood. And the rooms that stop me — the ones that genuinely rearrange something in my chest — share one unlikely quality: they know when to stop talking.
This is something our industry doesn’t discuss enough. We talk endlessly about trends and palettes, about whether arches are in or brass is out. We fill feeds with mood boards and material libraries. But the conversation we sidestep — the one that separates memorable interior design from merely attractive decoration — is the one about feeling. About how a room makes you breathe. About what it does to the tension in your shoulders the moment you step inside.
The best luxury interior design has always understood this. And right now, after years of trend-chasing and algorithmic aesthetics, the most discerning clients I work with are coming back to it with a clarity that feels almost defiant.
The Problem with “Looking Like” Something
Somewhere in the last decade, a quiet catastrophe happened in residential design. Homes started looking like each other. Not because their owners shared the same taste — they didn’t — but because the visual language of luxury narrowed to a punishingly small vocabulary. White oak. Unlacquered brass. Bouclé. Performance velvet. Fluted everything. Beautiful materials, every one of them. But when every living room in every coastal city speaks the same dialect, something essential is lost.
What’s lost is specificity. The thing that makes your home yours — not a set, not a showroom, not someone else’s idea of what wealth looks like, but the physical expression of how you actually live and who you actually are.
I studied at the School of the Art Institute in Chicago before earning my degree in Interior Architecture and Product Design at Kansas State, and later continued at the Architectural Association in London. Across all of those classrooms and studios, the lesson that survived everything else was this: design is not about appearance. It is about experience. A room is not a photograph. It is an environment that shapes behavior, alters mood, and — when done honestly — becomes a kind of autobiography of the people who inhabit it.
That’s a harder thing to sell than a trend report. But it’s the only thing worth building.
Starting with the Body, Not the Board
When I begin a new project — whether it’s a boutique hospitality concept or a multigenerational family home — I don’t start with Pinterest. I start with questions that sound deceptively simple. How do you enter this house? What do you see first? Where does your hand land? Where does the light fall at the hour you’re most likely to be home?
These are spatial questions, but they’re also emotional ones. A foyer that forces you to pause and decompress after a long drive feels entirely different from one that funnels you straight into open living space. Neither is wrong. But the choice should be deliberate, not inherited from the last project your contractor built.
I think of this as the architecture of feeling — the invisible structure beneath every finish and fixture that determines whether a room works or merely looks like it works. It’s the reason two identically furnished rooms can produce completely different responses. One holds you. The other just holds furniture.
The question I always return to is not “What should this room look like?” but “How should this room make you feel at eight o’clock on a Tuesday evening?”
This isn’t esoteric. It’s practical. When you design from feeling outward, decisions that seem overwhelming — which stone, which textile, which hardware — suddenly clarify themselves. The marble you choose for a kitchen isn’t arbitrary; it depends on whether you want that room to feel like a warm, lived-in gathering place or a clean, sculptural workshop. Both are valid. But they call for very different veining, very different edge profiles, very different relationships to the cabinetry around them.
Material Honesty and the Intelligence of Touch
One of the most significant shifts I’m seeing in high-end residential design is a return to what I’d call material honesty — a willingness to let materials speak in their own voice rather than forcing them into some predetermined aesthetic role.
Consider stone. For years, the default in luxury kitchens and bathrooms was white marble — Calacatta, Statuario — selected not for its geological character but for its ability to photograph cleanly. It’s a gorgeous material. But it was being used as a signifier rather than a substance. A shorthand for “expensive” rather than an engagement with what stone actually is: ancient, variable, alive with the history of its own formation.
What I’m drawn to now — and what the most thoughtful clients are asking for — are stones with genuine personality. Verde Alpi, with its deep, forested veining. Pietra Cardosa, that cool blue-grey limestone from Tuscany that warms under your hand. Coquina, the shell-aggregate stone native to coastal Florida, humble and textured and impossible to replicate with engineered alternatives. These aren’t trend picks. They’re materials that carry meaning — geological, regional, tactile — and that meaning becomes part of the room’s story.
The same principle applies to wood, to metal, to textiles. A hand-forged iron door pull tells your hand something different from a machined one. A linen that’s been stone-washed has a weight and drape that no synthetic performance fabric can replicate — not because the performance fabric isn’t good, but because it wasn’t shaped by the same forces. The twentieth-century designer Charlotte Perriand understood this intuitively. She let bamboo be bamboo and steel be steel, and the result was furniture that felt almost inevitable, as if the material had chosen its own form.
This is the kind of material intelligence I try to bring to every project, whether I’m specifying a full residential interior or selecting a single piece of lighting for a client’s entry. The material should earn its place.
The Discipline of Restraint
I’ve designed over a thousand products in my career — furniture, lighting, objects — and if there’s one truth I’ve learned from both sides of the process, it’s this: the most difficult design decision is what to leave out.
We live in a culture of addition. Another accent wall. Another statement fixture. Another layer. And layers, done well, are the foundation of rich, dimensional design. But there’s a threshold — and it’s different for every room, every client, every context — beyond which accumulation stops creating warmth and starts creating noise.
I think about restraint the way a good editor thinks about prose. The goal isn’t minimalism for its own sake — that can feel sterile, even punishing. The goal is precision. Every element in a room should be doing work. If the hand-plastered wall texture is carrying the emotional weight of the space, maybe the window treatments don’t need to compete. If the dining table is a piece of genuine craft — something with joinery you can read, a finish you want to touch — maybe the chandelier above it should recede.
This is the thinking behind what some people are calling “quiet luxury” in interiors, though I find that phrase slightly misleading. There’s nothing quiet about a room designed with real conviction. It’s more like confidence — the kind that doesn’t need to announce itself because the quality is evident the moment you walk in, sit down, run your hand along the arm of the chair.
Rooms That Remember
The projects I’m proudest of are not the ones that looked best in photographs. They’re the ones where, years later, the client tells me the room still works. That their family actually gathers there. That the sofa cushion their daughter always claimed is worn in a way they love. That the kitchen has survived ten Thanksgivings and still feels beautiful.
This is the real test of thoughtful interior design — not whether it photographs well on day one, but whether it deepens with use. Whether the materials age honestly. Whether the layout accommodates real life with its spills and its chaos and its Sunday mornings in pajamas.
When I work with families building multigenerational homes, this principle becomes even more critical. A space that serves a retired couple, their adult children, and grandchildren under five has to be resilient without feeling institutional, sophisticated without feeling untouchable. It has to hold noise and stillness in the same architecture. That’s not a decorating challenge. It’s a design challenge — one that starts with understanding how these specific people move through their days, and building outward from there.
What I Mean When I Say “Bespoke”
The word gets overused in our industry, I know. But genuine bespoke design — the kind where every specification is a response to a particular person in a particular place — remains the highest form of what we do. And it’s almost impossible to replicate at scale, which is precisely why it matters.
A bespoke interior doesn’t just fit the room. It fits the life. The reading nook calibrated to catch northern light at the exact hour the homeowner finishes work. The kitchen island sized not to standard dimensions but to the distance that feels natural when two people cook together. The guest suite positioned so that visitors feel welcomed but the household’s daily rhythm remains undisturbed.
These decisions aren’t glamorous. You won’t find them on a trend list. But they are the reason some homes feel effortless while others — even lavishly appointed ones — feel like they’re trying too hard. Working with a designer who understands this distinction is, I believe, one of the most meaningful investments you can make in how you live.
A Note on the Things We Keep
I want to end with something personal, because I think it speaks to a larger shift happening in how people relate to their homes.
More and more, the clients who find me — in St. Louis, in Sarasota, on Nantucket, and increasingly through virtual consultations from across the country — are less interested in having “the latest” and more interested in having things that mean something. A hand-thrown ceramic vessel from a potter they met on vacation. A vintage textile reupholstered onto a modern frame. A piece of furniture they’ll keep for decades and eventually pass along.
This instinct — toward longevity, toward objects with provenance, toward rooms that accumulate meaning rather than simply displaying taste — is the most promising development I’ve seen in residential design in twenty years. It’s a correction, and a welcome one. After an era of disposable aesthetics and content-driven interiors, people are remembering that a home is not a backdrop. It’s a life, unfolding.
And the rooms that serve that life best are the ones designed not from a mood board or a trend forecast, but from the inside out — starting with the way you want to feel when you’re finally, gratefully, home.



