
Designer Susan Ferrier mixes a neutral color palette with a few bold gestures to create a Zen-like home.

In the living room of an Alabama townhouse, designer Susan Ferrier created a rich tapestry of high-contrast neutrals—deep browns, pale beiges, and taupes. In here and in all rooms except the master bedroom, walls and trim are painted in Benjamin Moore's Abingdon Putty. Instead of using a coffee table, Ferrier arranged cream tree stumps from Bungalow Classic's Petrified Wood Collection and a black one from South of Market so the view of the fireplace wouldn't be blocked. Photograph of a Dutch girl by Jack Spencer.
In the living/dining area, a demilune console is slipcovered in a fabric that blends with the linen curtains—a trick Susan Ferrier uses to unify small spaces. The nailhead Elliot chair and metallic Redondo gourd lamps are from Bungalow Classic.
A seven-foot-wide foxed-glass mirror was made for the dining area to open up the space. Its dramatic scale is in perfect proportion with the Flemish wood and iron chandelier from Beckett Antiques, the table—a bone concrete top on an iron base by Bradley Hughes—and the Craig dining chairs by Hamilton. The sculpture is mounted driftwood.
The bed's custom headboard is upholstered in cowhide. Bedside tables are Avery Bombe cabinets from Crate & Barrel. One of Ferrier's designers, Donna Harrigan, found the black glass and metal chandelier—a new piece from France—on the Internet.
Original article and pictures take www.housebeautiful.com site
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