<<

SUBSCRIBE

MAGAZINE Step Inside Ashley Stark's Transformed Upper Abode

During the head-to-toe renovation of her town house, textile scion Ashley Stark Kenner loved bringing her work home

By Hannah Martin Photography by Douglas Friedman Styled by Colin King

October 10, 2020

“We’ll just fix it up a little bit.”

That’s what Ashley Stark Kenner thought when she and husband Nick, founder and CEO of Just Salad, bought a town house on ’s Upper East Side to make room for their growing family. The landmarked 19th-century building had a lot going for it—generous dimensions, a deep backyard, and, a rarity among town houses, lots of light. But at their first meeting with New York–based Lichten Architects, talk quickly shifted to “gut renovation.”

Subscribe today and get 2 free gifts!

Subscribe Now

“The façade was the only thing that stayed,” Kenner says now, three years later. “For a while, we didn’t have a roof. We didn’t have a floor. We dug out the basement, we added a top floor, we added terraces. If I showed you the before and after, you’d be like, ‘What?’ ”

In the living room of Ashley Stark kenner’s Manhattan home, 1957 Jansen chairs pull up to a custom oak dining table surrounded by Pierre Jeanneret chairs and a custom sofa surround a Kelvin faux bois wallpaper by Holland & Sherry. Serge Mouille chandelier; LaVerne cocktail table. Artworks by Julian Schnabel, Brent Wadden, mirrors from Newel; painting by Beverly Fishman. Douglas and Damien Hirst. © 2020 Julian Schnabel / Artists Rights Society Friedman (ARS), New York. © Damien Hirst and Science Ltd. All rights reserved / DACS, London / ARS, NY 2020 Douglas Friedman

As the senior vice president of design and creative director at the eight-decades-old textile titan Stark, she knew exactly what she wanted. And with a totally clean slate, she didn’t have to compromise. “I had a vision, and I stuck with it,” says Kenner, calling her aesthetic “laid-back, organic, beachy, a little bit French.”

Working closely with Kenner, architects Andrew Friedman and Kevin Lichten created a floor plan that functioned for family life and, as Friedman explains, “felt loftlike and modern but still like a traditional town house.” That sensibility extended to the decor, spearheaded by New York firm Aman & Meeks (with a heavy hand from Kenner herself).

The son’s custom bed, covered in a Holland & Sherry linen, flanked by Karl Springer lamps Douglas Friedman Artworks by (above Desk) and Takashi Murakami (above Shearling-Covered Armchair) mix with an RH baby & child desk and chair and a chandelier from CB2 in the daughter’s room. © 2020 Donald Baechler / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York Douglas Friedman

“Ashley grew up in this business,” says James Aman. He and John Meeks have known her for more than a decade, having designed her first city apartment, before she was married. “Not only does she have an innate sense of style herself but she gets it, she understands it, she knows how to be current while staying classic.”

ADVERTISEMENT Ad Late summer lake trip? Vrbo

SEARCH HOMES

Kenner’s crystal-clear vision was ground-up, starting with the floors. Once the bones were rebuilt, there was Kenner, eight months pregnant with her third child, sifting through oak floorboards with Friedman. After months of searching for the perfect wood, she had finally found some reclaimed oak through LV Wood (a recommendation from her friend Nate Berkus) that resonated, and she hand-selected and placed each board into a chevron pattern. When it came time to lay the bathroom floors with marble from Artistic Tile, it was a similar scene. Kenner combed through boxes of tiles, selecting pieces with only the subtlest veining.

In the kitchen, painted Benjamin Moore Decorator’s White, the appliances are by Gaggenau, sink by Dornbracht, and chairs from Mecox. Douglas Friedman

ADVERTISEMENT

Rooms were assembled around her requests. Pierre Jeanneret’s iconic Chandigarh chairs were, as Meeks recalls, “on her bucket list,” and the rest of the living room came together around a pair scored via 1stdibs. Her idea for a wraparound sectional, modeled after a vintage Knoll piece, and a custom-made bookcase set the cozy tone in the den. And Gracie worked with her on a custom wallpaper for the powder room with a particular “distressed denim-blue” ground.

Much of the decor is custom made, mixing in with a thoughtful collection of vintage and antiques. A bespoke Vladimir Kagan–inspired sofa in the living room curves around the Kelvin LaVerne cocktail table Kenner brought with her from her last place. A cerused-oak vanity was constructed for her dressing room. And Jansen dining chairs gather around a bronze-inlaid oak farm table in the dining room, built with hidden leaves for hosting large family gatherings at holidays.

1 / 13

Douglas Friedman

In the library, painted in Benjamin Moore’s CobbleStone Path, a custom bookcase and sofa envelop a Willy Rizzo cocktail table. Moroccan rug from Stark. Hanging light by Apparatus. Art by Richard Estes.

The palette is reserved, preferring lush textures, rich materials, and subtle motifs over bold statements. “I’m surrounded by so much pattern and color in the showroom,” Kenner explains. “I always want my home to be more soothing.” Textiles are a big part of the equation, almost all of them Stark or Stark-owned brands and many of them prototypes she is testing out. “As I was developing the collection, I knew exactly what would go in each room,” she says of the carpets, which range from a shaggy Moroccan rug to sisal to custom textured shearling. Walls wear textiles too, some papered in faux bois, others covered in braided hemp or wool. Works of fine art, like a bold Beverly Fishman painting in the dining room and a woven fiber piece by Brent Wadden in the living room, deliver a few happy hits of color.

The vibe is casual and family-friendly, yet still sophisticated. An avid cook, Kenner created her dream kitchen, outfitted by Gaggenau (“The face of the oven never gets hot, which is great with kids”), and is happy to report that it’s now the go-to family zone. Sofas passed down from her mother have been recovered in performance fabrics (“When I was little, I was never allowed to touch them”). The playroom is bold and graphic in black and white (“The toys bring the color”), and it’s easy to imagine it becoming a hangout in the future. “I’m a strong believer in making kids’ spaces that don’t look like kids’ spaces,” Kenner says.

As for those kids, it seems they’re already cultivating the family taste for textiles. Despite all the spaces created just for them, Kenner reveals, “Their favorite thing in the house is the shearling carpet in my dressing room.”

1 / 19

Douglas Freidman

Kenner and her daughter at the living-room bar.

The Beautiful Homes And Celebrity Style You Dream About

Email Address

SIGN UP NOW

Will be used in accordance with our User Agreement and Privacy Policy & Cookie Statement

READ MORE

MAGAZINE CLEVER DECORATING + RENOVATION CLEVER Tour This Colorful This Notting Hill Jessie Schuster The Top Clever Town Townhouse Features a Transforms a Spacious Renovation Stories of House 3-in-1 Living Space SoHo Loft Inside an… 2020

By Jane Keltner de Valle By Lauren Jones By Paola Singer By Sophia Herring

Sponsored Stories

ENHANCEYOURBROWS.… BRILLIANT EARTH SILVERSINGLES CADILLAC CT5 | SPONSO… OM ED LISTINGS Beauty Surgeon 10 Tips To Make This Is Where the The All New Shares #1 At Your Diamond Majority of Cadillac CT5 Is Home Tip For… Look Bigger Singles Over 50… The Incredible Balding Brows Are Finding Love in Evanston

YOURHEALTHYGUT.COM MATERNITY WEEK LUXURY AUTO | SPONSO… BATHROOM REMODEL | … ED LISTINGS PONSORED LINKS Randy Jackson: Presidents The New 2020 See The Newest "This Drink Is Ranked By Their Volkswagen Trends In Like A… IQs Lineup Is Turnin… Bathroom… Powerwash For Heads PoweredRemodeling By Your Gut"

___

Subscriptions Connect with AD

Subscribe About AD Our website, archdigest.com, offers constant original Customer Service Contact the Editors coverage of the interior design and architecture worlds, Renew Subscription Newsletter Sign Up new shops and products, travel destinations, art and Give a Gift AD 360 cultural events, celebrity style, and high-end real estate as Change Address Contact Advertising well as access to print features and images from the AD archives.

Condé Nast Store | Careers | Site Map | Accessibility Help | Reprints / Permissions | Condé Nast Spotlight COOKIES SETTINGS

© 2021 Condé Nast. All rights reserved. Use of this site constitutes acceptance of our User Agreement (updated as of 1/1/21) and Privacy Policy and Cookie Statement (updated as of 1/1/21) and Your California Privacy Rights. Architectural Digest may earn a portion of sales from products that are purchased through our site as part of our Affiliate Partnerships with retailers. The material on this site may not be reproduced, distributed, transmitted, cached or otherwise used, except with the prior written permission of Condé Nast. Ad Choices SUBSCRIBE

MAGAZINE Step Inside Ashley Stark's Transformed Upper East Side Abode

During the head-to-toe renovation of her Manhattan town house, textile scion Ashley Stark Kenner loved bringing her work home

By Hannah Martin Photography by Douglas Friedman Styled by Colin King

October 10, 2020

“We’ll just fix it up a little bit.”

That’s what Ashley Stark Kenner thought when she and husband Nick, founder and CEO of Just Salad, bought a town house on New York’s Upper East Side to make room for their growing family. The landmarked 19th-century building had a lot going for it—generous dimensions, a deep backyard, and, a rarity among town houses, lots of light. But at their first meeting with New York–based Lichten Architects, talk quickly shifted to “gut renovation.”

Subscribe today and get 2 free gifts!

Subscribe Now

“The façade was the only thing that stayed,” Kenner says now, three years later. “For a while, we didn’t have a roof. We didn’t have a floor. We dug out the basement, we added a top floor, we added terraces. If I showed you the before and after, you’d be like, ‘What?’ ”

In the living room of Ashley Stark kenner’s Manhattan home, 1957 Jansen chairs pull up to a custom oak dining table surrounded by Pierre Jeanneret chairs and a custom sofa surround a Kelvin faux bois wallpaper by Holland & Sherry. Serge Mouille chandelier; LaVerne cocktail table. Artworks by Julian Schnabel, Brent Wadden, mirrors from Newel; painting by Beverly Fishman. Douglas and Damien Hirst. © 2020 Julian Schnabel / Artists Rights Society Friedman (ARS), New York. © Damien Hirst and Science Ltd. All rights reserved / DACS, London / ARS, NY 2020 Douglas Friedman

As the senior vice president of design and creative director at the eight-decades-old textile titan Stark, she knew exactly what she wanted. And with a totally clean slate, she didn’t have to compromise. “I had a vision, and I stuck with it,” says Kenner, calling her aesthetic “laid-back, organic, beachy, a little bit French.”

Working closely with Kenner, architects Andrew Friedman and Kevin Lichten created a floor plan that functioned for family life and, as Friedman explains, “felt loftlike and modern but still like a traditional town house.” That sensibility extended to the decor, spearheaded by New York firm Aman & Meeks (with a heavy hand from Kenner herself).

The son’s custom bed, covered in a Holland & Sherry linen, flanked by Karl Springer lamps Douglas Friedman Artworks by Donald Baechler (above Desk) and Takashi Murakami (above Shearling-Covered Armchair) mix with an RH baby & child desk and chair and a chandelier from CB2 in the daughter’s room. © 2020 Donald Baechler / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York Douglas Friedman

“Ashley grew up in this business,” says James Aman. He and John Meeks have known her for more than a decade, having designed her first city apartment, before she was married. “Not only does she have an innate sense of style herself but she gets it, she understands it, she knows how to be current while staying classic.”

ADVERTISEMENT Ad Late summer lake trip? Vrbo

SEARCH HOMES

Kenner’s crystal-clear vision was ground-up, starting with the floors. Once the bones were rebuilt, there was Kenner, eight months pregnant with her third child, sifting through oak floorboards with Friedman. After months of searching for the perfect wood, she had finally found some reclaimed oak through LV Wood (a recommendation from her friend Nate Berkus) that resonated, and she hand-selected and placed each board into a chevron pattern. When it came time to lay the bathroom floors with marble from Artistic Tile, it was a similar scene. Kenner combed through boxes of tiles, selecting pieces with only the subtlest veining.

In the kitchen, painted Benjamin Moore Decorator’s White, the appliances are by Gaggenau, sink by Dornbracht, and chairs from Mecox. Douglas Friedman

ADVERTISEMENT

Rooms were assembled around her requests. Pierre Jeanneret’s iconic Chandigarh chairs were, as Meeks recalls, “on her bucket list,” and the rest of the living room came together around a pair scored via 1stdibs. Her idea for a wraparound sectional, modeled after a vintage Knoll piece, and a custom-made bookcase set the cozy tone in the den. And Gracie worked with her on a custom wallpaper for the powder room with a particular “distressed denim-blue” ground.

Much of the decor is custom made, mixing in with a thoughtful collection of vintage and antiques. A bespoke Vladimir Kagan–inspired sofa in the living room curves around the Kelvin LaVerne cocktail table Kenner brought with her from her last place. A cerused-oak vanity was constructed for her dressing room. And Jansen dining chairs gather around a bronze-inlaid oak farm table in the dining room, built with hidden leaves for hosting large family gatherings at holidays.

1 / 13

Douglas Friedman

In the library, painted in Benjamin Moore’s CobbleStone Path, a custom bookcase and sofa envelop a Willy Rizzo cocktail table. Moroccan rug from Stark. Hanging light by Apparatus. Art by Richard Estes.

The palette is reserved, preferring lush textures, rich materials, and subtle motifs over bold statements. “I’m surrounded by so much pattern and color in the showroom,” Kenner explains. “I always want my home to be more soothing.” Textiles are a big part of the equation, almost all of them Stark or Stark-owned brands and many of them prototypes she is testing out. “As I was developing the collection, I knew exactly what would go in each room,” she says of the carpets, which range from a shaggy Moroccan rug to sisal to custom textured shearling. Walls wear textiles too, some papered in faux bois, others covered in braided hemp or wool. Works of fine art, like a bold Beverly Fishman painting in the dining room and a woven fiber piece by Brent Wadden in the living room, deliver a few happy hits of color.

The vibe is casual and family-friendly, yet still sophisticated. An avid cook, Kenner created her dream kitchen, outfitted by Gaggenau (“The face of the oven never gets hot, which is great with kids”), and is happy to report that it’s now the go-to family zone. Sofas passed down from her mother have been recovered in performance fabrics (“When I was little, I was never allowed to touch them”). The playroom is bold and graphic in black and white (“The toys bring the color”), and it’s easy to imagine it becoming a hangout in the future. “I’m a strong believer in making kids’ spaces that don’t look like kids’ spaces,” Kenner says.

As for those kids, it seems they’re already cultivating the family taste for textiles. Despite all the spaces created just for them, Kenner reveals, “Their favorite thing in the house is the shearling carpet in my dressing room.”

1 / 19

Douglas Freidman

Kenner and her daughter at the living-room bar.

The Beautiful Homes And Celebrity Style You Dream About

Email Address

SIGN UP NOW

Will be used in accordance with our User Agreement and Privacy Policy & Cookie Statement

READ MORE

MAGAZINE CLEVER DECORATING + RENOVATION CLEVER Tour This Colorful This Notting Hill Jessie Schuster The Top Clever West Village Town Townhouse Features a Transforms a Spacious Renovation Stories of House 3-in-1 Living Space SoHo Loft Inside an… 2020

By Jane Keltner de Valle By Lauren Jones By Paola Singer By Sophia Herring

Sponsored Stories

ENHANCEYOURBROWS.… BRILLIANT EARTH SILVERSINGLES CADILLAC CT5 | SPONSO… OM ED LISTINGS Beauty Surgeon 10 Tips To Make This Is Where the The All New Shares #1 At Your Diamond Majority of Cadillac CT5 Is Home Tip For… Look Bigger Singles Over 50… The Incredible Balding Brows Are Finding Love in Evanston

YOURHEALTHYGUT.COM MATERNITY WEEK LUXURY AUTO | SPONSO… BATHROOM REMODEL | … ED LISTINGS PONSORED LINKS Randy Jackson: Presidents The New 2020 See The Newest "This Drink Is Ranked By Their Volkswagen Trends In Like A… IQs Lineup Is Turnin… Bathroom… Powerwash For Heads PoweredRemodeling By Your Gut"

___

Subscriptions Connect with AD

Subscribe About AD Our website, archdigest.com, offers constant original Customer Service Contact the Editors coverage of the interior design and architecture worlds, Renew Subscription Newsletter Sign Up new shops and products, travel destinations, art and Give a Gift AD 360 cultural events, celebrity style, and high-end real estate as Change Address Contact Advertising well as access to print features and images from the AD archives.

Condé Nast Store | Careers | Site Map | Accessibility Help | Reprints / Permissions | Condé Nast Spotlight COOKIES SETTINGS

© 2021 Condé Nast. All rights reserved. Use of this site constitutes acceptance of our User Agreement (updated as of 1/1/21) and Privacy Policy and Cookie Statement (updated as of 1/1/21) and Your California Privacy Rights. Architectural Digest may earn a portion of sales from products that are purchased through our site as part of our Affiliate Partnerships with retailers. The material on this site may not be reproduced, distributed, transmitted, cached or otherwise used, except with the prior written permission of Condé Nast. Ad Choices SUBSCRIBE

MAGAZINE Step Inside Ashley Stark's Transformed Upper East Side Abode

During the head-to-toe renovation of her Manhattan town house, textile scion Ashley Stark Kenner loved bringing her work home

By Hannah Martin Photography by Douglas Friedman Styled by Colin King

October 10, 2020

“We’ll just fix it up a little bit.”

That’s what Ashley Stark Kenner thought when she and husband Nick, founder and CEO of Just Salad, bought a town house on New York’s Upper East Side to make room for their growing family. The landmarked 19th-century building had a lot going for it—generous dimensions, a deep backyard, and, a rarity among town houses, lots of light. But at their first meeting with New York–based Lichten Architects, talk quickly shifted to “gut renovation.”

Subscribe today and get 2 free gifts!

Subscribe Now

“The façade was the only thing that stayed,” Kenner says now, three years later. “For a while, we didn’t have a roof. We didn’t have a floor. We dug out the basement, we added a top floor, we added terraces. If I showed you the before and after, you’d be like, ‘What?’ ”

In the living room of Ashley Stark kenner’s Manhattan home, 1957 Jansen chairs pull up to a custom oak dining table surrounded by Pierre Jeanneret chairs and a custom sofa surround a Kelvin faux bois wallpaper by Holland & Sherry. Serge Mouille chandelier; LaVerne cocktail table. Artworks by Julian Schnabel, Brent Wadden, mirrors from Newel; painting by Beverly Fishman. Douglas and Damien Hirst. © 2020 Julian Schnabel / Artists Rights Society Friedman (ARS), New York. © Damien Hirst and Science Ltd. All rights reserved / DACS, London / ARS, NY 2020 Douglas Friedman

As the senior vice president of design and creative director at the eight-decades-old textile titan Stark, she knew exactly what she wanted. And with a totally clean slate, she didn’t have to compromise. “I had a vision, and I stuck with it,” says Kenner, calling her aesthetic “laid-back, organic, beachy, a little bit French.”

Working closely with Kenner, architects Andrew Friedman and Kevin Lichten created a floor plan that functioned for family life and, as Friedman explains, “felt loftlike and modern but still like a traditional town house.” That sensibility extended to the decor, spearheaded by New York firm Aman & Meeks (with a heavy hand from Kenner herself).

The son’s custom bed, covered in a Holland & Sherry linen, flanked by Karl Springer lamps Douglas Friedman Artworks by Donald Baechler (above Desk) and Takashi Murakami (above Shearling-Covered Armchair) mix with an RH baby & child desk and chair and a chandelier from CB2 in the daughter’s room. © 2020 Donald Baechler / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York Douglas Friedman

“Ashley grew up in this business,” says James Aman. He and John Meeks have known her for more than a decade, having designed her first city apartment, before she was married. “Not only does she have an innate sense of style herself but she gets it, she understands it, she knows how to be current while staying classic.”

ADVERTISEMENT Ad Late summer lake trip? Vrbo

SEARCH HOMES

Kenner’s crystal-clear vision was ground-up, starting with the floors. Once the bones were rebuilt, there was Kenner, eight months pregnant with her third child, sifting through oak floorboards with Friedman. After months of searching for the perfect wood, she had finally found some reclaimed oak through LV Wood (a recommendation from her friend Nate Berkus) that resonated, and she hand-selected and placed each board into a chevron pattern. When it came time to lay the bathroom floors with marble from Artistic Tile, it was a similar scene. Kenner combed through boxes of tiles, selecting pieces with only the subtlest veining.

In the kitchen, painted Benjamin Moore Decorator’s White, the appliances are by Gaggenau, sink by Dornbracht, and chairs from Mecox. Douglas Friedman

ADVERTISEMENT

Rooms were assembled around her requests. Pierre Jeanneret’s iconic Chandigarh chairs were, as Meeks recalls, “on her bucket list,” and the rest of the living room came together around a pair scored via 1stdibs. Her idea for a wraparound sectional, modeled after a vintage Knoll piece, and a custom-made bookcase set the cozy tone in the den. And Gracie worked with her on a custom wallpaper for the powder room with a particular “distressed denim-blue” ground.

Much of the decor is custom made, mixing in with a thoughtful collection of vintage and antiques. A bespoke Vladimir Kagan–inspired sofa in the living room curves around the Kelvin LaVerne cocktail table Kenner brought with her from her last place. A cerused-oak vanity was constructed for her dressing room. And Jansen dining chairs gather around a bronze-inlaid oak farm table in the dining room, built with hidden leaves for hosting large family gatherings at holidays.

1 / 13

Douglas Friedman

In the library, painted in Benjamin Moore’s CobbleStone Path, a custom bookcase and sofa envelop a Willy Rizzo cocktail table. Moroccan rug from Stark. Hanging light by Apparatus. Art by Richard Estes.

The palette is reserved, preferring lush textures, rich materials, and subtle motifs over bold statements. “I’m surrounded by so much pattern and color in the showroom,” Kenner explains. “I always want my home to be more soothing.” Textiles are a big part of the equation, almost all of them Stark or Stark-owned brands and many of them prototypes she is testing out. “As I was developing the collection, I knew exactly what would go in each room,” she says of the carpets, which range from a shaggy Moroccan rug to sisal to custom textured shearling. Walls wear textiles too, some papered in faux bois, others covered in braided hemp or wool. Works of fine art, like a bold Beverly Fishman painting in the dining room and a woven fiber piece by Brent Wadden in the living room, deliver a few happy hits of color.

The vibe is casual and family-friendly, yet still sophisticated. An avid cook, Kenner created her dream kitchen, outfitted by Gaggenau (“The face of the oven never gets hot, which is great with kids”), and is happy to report that it’s now the go-to family zone. Sofas passed down from her mother have been recovered in performance fabrics (“When I was little, I was never allowed to touch them”). The playroom is bold and graphic in black and white (“The toys bring the color”), and it’s easy to imagine it becoming a hangout in the future. “I’m a strong believer in making kids’ spaces that don’t look like kids’ spaces,” Kenner says.

As for those kids, it seems they’re already cultivating the family taste for textiles. Despite all the spaces created just for them, Kenner reveals, “Their favorite thing in the house is the shearling carpet in my dressing room.”

1 / 19

Douglas Freidman

Kenner and her daughter at the living-room bar.

The Beautiful Homes And Celebrity Style You Dream About

Email Address

SIGN UP NOW

Will be used in accordance with our User Agreement and Privacy Policy & Cookie Statement

READ MORE

MAGAZINE CLEVER DECORATING + RENOVATION CLEVER Tour This Colorful This Notting Hill Jessie Schuster The Top Clever West Village Town Townhouse Features a Transforms a Spacious Renovation Stories of House 3-in-1 Living Space SoHo Loft Inside an… 2020

By Jane Keltner de Valle By Lauren Jones By Paola Singer By Sophia Herring

Sponsored Stories

ENHANCEYOURBROWS.… BRILLIANT EARTH SILVERSINGLES CADILLAC CT5 | SPONSO… OM ED LISTINGS Beauty Surgeon 10 Tips To Make This Is Where the The All New Shares #1 At Your Diamond Majority of Cadillac CT5 Is Home Tip For… Look Bigger Singles Over 50… The Incredible Balding Brows Are Finding Love in Evanston

YOURHEALTHYGUT.COM MATERNITY WEEK LUXURY AUTO | SPONSO… BATHROOM REMODEL | … ED LISTINGS PONSORED LINKS Randy Jackson: Presidents The New 2020 See The Newest "This Drink Is Ranked By Their Volkswagen Trends In Like A… IQs Lineup Is Turnin… Bathroom… Powerwash For Heads PoweredRemodeling By Your Gut"

___

Subscriptions Connect with AD

Subscribe About AD Our website, archdigest.com, offers constant original Customer Service Contact the Editors coverage of the interior design and architecture worlds, Renew Subscription Newsletter Sign Up new shops and products, travel destinations, art and Give a Gift AD 360 cultural events, celebrity style, and high-end real estate as Change Address Contact Advertising well as access to print features and images from the AD archives.

Condé Nast Store | Careers | Site Map | Accessibility Help | Reprints / Permissions | Condé Nast Spotlight COOKIES SETTINGS

© 2021 Condé Nast. All rights reserved. Use of this site constitutes acceptance of our User Agreement (updated as of 1/1/21) and Privacy Policy and Cookie Statement (updated as of 1/1/21) and Your California Privacy Rights. Architectural Digest may earn a portion of sales from products that are purchased through our site as part of our Affiliate Partnerships with retailers. The material on this site may not be reproduced, distributed, transmitted, cached or otherwise used, except with the prior written permission of Condé Nast. Ad Choices SUBSCRIBE

MAGAZINE Step Inside Ashley Stark's Transformed Upper East Side Abode

During the head-to-toe renovation of her Manhattan town house, textile scion Ashley Stark Kenner loved bringing her work home

By Hannah Martin Photography by Douglas Friedman Styled by Colin King

October 10, 2020

“We’ll just fix it up a little bit.”

That’s what Ashley Stark Kenner thought when she and husband Nick, founder and CEO of Just Salad, bought a town house on New York’s Upper East Side to make room for their growing family. The landmarked 19th-century building had a lot going for it—generous dimensions, a deep backyard, and, a rarity among town houses, lots of light. But at their first meeting with New York–based Lichten Architects, talk quickly shifted to “gut renovation.”

Subscribe today and get 2 free gifts!

Subscribe Now

“The façade was the only thing that stayed,” Kenner says now, three years later. “For a while, we didn’t have a roof. We didn’t have a floor. We dug out the basement, we added a top floor, we added terraces. If I showed you the before and after, you’d be like, ‘What?’ ”

In the living room of Ashley Stark kenner’s Manhattan home, 1957 Jansen chairs pull up to a custom oak dining table surrounded by Pierre Jeanneret chairs and a custom sofa surround a Kelvin faux bois wallpaper by Holland & Sherry. Serge Mouille chandelier; LaVerne cocktail table. Artworks by Julian Schnabel, Brent Wadden, mirrors from Newel; painting by Beverly Fishman. Douglas and Damien Hirst. © 2020 Julian Schnabel / Artists Rights Society Friedman (ARS), New York. © Damien Hirst and Science Ltd. All rights reserved / DACS, London / ARS, NY 2020 Douglas Friedman

As the senior vice president of design and creative director at the eight-decades-old textile titan Stark, she knew exactly what she wanted. And with a totally clean slate, she didn’t have to compromise. “I had a vision, and I stuck with it,” says Kenner, calling her aesthetic “laid-back, organic, beachy, a little bit French.”

Working closely with Kenner, architects Andrew Friedman and Kevin Lichten created a floor plan that functioned for family life and, as Friedman explains, “felt loftlike and modern but still like a traditional town house.” That sensibility extended to the decor, spearheaded by New York firm Aman & Meeks (with a heavy hand from Kenner herself).

The son’s custom bed, covered in a Holland & Sherry linen, flanked by Karl Springer lamps Douglas Friedman Artworks by Donald Baechler (above Desk) and Takashi Murakami (above Shearling-Covered Armchair) mix with an RH baby & child desk and chair and a chandelier from CB2 in the daughter’s room. © 2020 Donald Baechler / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York Douglas Friedman

“Ashley grew up in this business,” says James Aman. He and John Meeks have known her for more than a decade, having designed her first city apartment, before she was married. “Not only does she have an innate sense of style herself but she gets it, she understands it, she knows how to be current while staying classic.”

ADVERTISEMENT Ad Late summer lake trip? Vrbo

SEARCH HOMES

Kenner’s crystal-clear vision was ground-up, starting with the floors. Once the bones were rebuilt, there was Kenner, eight months pregnant with her third child, sifting through oak floorboards with Friedman. After months of searching for the perfect wood, she had finally found some reclaimed oak through LV Wood (a recommendation from her friend Nate Berkus) that resonated, and she hand-selected and placed each board into a chevron pattern. When it came time to lay the bathroom floors with marble from Artistic Tile, it was a similar scene. Kenner combed through boxes of tiles, selecting pieces with only the subtlest veining.

In the kitchen, painted Benjamin Moore Decorator’s White, the appliances are by Gaggenau, sink by Dornbracht, and chairs from Mecox. Douglas Friedman

ADVERTISEMENT

Rooms were assembled around her requests. Pierre Jeanneret’s iconic Chandigarh chairs were, as Meeks recalls, “on her bucket list,” and the rest of the living room came together around a pair scored via 1stdibs. Her idea for a wraparound sectional, modeled after a vintage Knoll piece, and a custom-made bookcase set the cozy tone in the den. And Gracie worked with her on a custom wallpaper for the powder room with a particular “distressed denim-blue” ground.

Much of the decor is custom made, mixing in with a thoughtful collection of vintage and antiques. A bespoke Vladimir Kagan–inspired sofa in the living room curves around the Kelvin LaVerne cocktail table Kenner brought with her from her last place. A cerused-oak vanity was constructed for her dressing room. And Jansen dining chairs gather around a bronze-inlaid oak farm table in the dining room, built with hidden leaves for hosting large family gatherings at holidays.

1 / 13

Douglas Friedman

In the library, painted in Benjamin Moore’s CobbleStone Path, a custom bookcase and sofa envelop a Willy Rizzo cocktail table. Moroccan rug from Stark. Hanging light by Apparatus. Art by Richard Estes.

The palette is reserved, preferring lush textures, rich materials, and subtle motifs over bold statements. “I’m surrounded by so much pattern and color in the showroom,” Kenner explains. “I always want my home to be more soothing.” Textiles are a big part of the equation, almost all of them Stark or Stark-owned brands and many of them prototypes she is testing out. “As I was developing the collection, I knew exactly what would go in each room,” she says of the carpets, which range from a shaggy Moroccan rug to sisal to custom textured shearling. Walls wear textiles too, some papered in faux bois, others covered in braided hemp or wool. Works of fine art, like a bold Beverly Fishman painting in the dining room and a woven fiber piece by Brent Wadden in the living room, deliver a few happy hits of color.

The vibe is casual and family-friendly, yet still sophisticated. An avid cook, Kenner created her dream kitchen, outfitted by Gaggenau (“The face of the oven never gets hot, which is great with kids”), and is happy to report that it’s now the go-to family zone. Sofas passed down from her mother have been recovered in performance fabrics (“When I was little, I was never allowed to touch them”). The playroom is bold and graphic in black and white (“The toys bring the color”), and it’s easy to imagine it becoming a hangout in the future. “I’m a strong believer in making kids’ spaces that don’t look like kids’ spaces,” Kenner says.

As for those kids, it seems they’re already cultivating the family taste for textiles. Despite all the spaces created just for them, Kenner reveals, “Their favorite thing in the house is the shearling carpet in my dressing room.”

1 / 19

Douglas Freidman

Kenner and her daughter at the living-room bar.

The Beautiful Homes And Celebrity Style You Dream About

Email Address

SIGN UP NOW

Will be used in accordance with our User Agreement and Privacy Policy & Cookie Statement

READ MORE

MAGAZINE CLEVER DECORATING + RENOVATION CLEVER Tour This Colorful This Notting Hill Jessie Schuster The Top Clever West Village Town Townhouse Features a Transforms a Spacious Renovation Stories of House 3-in-1 Living Space SoHo Loft Inside an… 2020

By Jane Keltner de Valle By Lauren Jones By Paola Singer By Sophia Herring

Sponsored Stories

ENHANCEYOURBROWS.… BRILLIANT EARTH SILVERSINGLES CADILLAC CT5 | SPONSO… OM ED LISTINGS Beauty Surgeon 10 Tips To Make This Is Where the The All New Shares #1 At Your Diamond Majority of Cadillac CT5 Is Home Tip For… Look Bigger Singles Over 50… The Incredible Balding Brows Are Finding Love in Evanston

YOURHEALTHYGUT.COM MATERNITY WEEK LUXURY AUTO | SPONSO… BATHROOM REMODEL | … ED LISTINGS PONSORED LINKS Randy Jackson: Presidents The New 2020 See The Newest "This Drink Is Ranked By Their Volkswagen Trends In Like A… IQs Lineup Is Turnin… Bathroom… Powerwash For Heads PoweredRemodeling By Your Gut"

___

Subscriptions Connect with AD

Subscribe About AD Our website, archdigest.com, offers constant original Customer Service Contact the Editors coverage of the interior design and architecture worlds, Renew Subscription Newsletter Sign Up new shops and products, travel destinations, art and Give a Gift AD 360 cultural events, celebrity style, and high-end real estate as Change Address Contact Advertising well as access to print features and images from the AD archives.

Condé Nast Store | Careers | Site Map | Accessibility Help | Reprints / Permissions | Condé Nast Spotlight COOKIES SETTINGS

© 2021 Condé Nast. All rights reserved. Use of this site constitutes acceptance of our User Agreement (updated as of 1/1/21) and Privacy Policy and Cookie Statement (updated as of 1/1/21) and Your California Privacy Rights. Architectural Digest may earn a portion of sales from products that are purchased through our site as part of our Affiliate Partnerships with retailers. The material on this site may not be reproduced, distributed, transmitted, cached or otherwise used, except with the prior written permission of Condé Nast. Ad Choices SUBSCRIBE

MAGAZINE Step Inside Ashley Stark's Transformed Upper East Side Abode

During the head-to-toe renovation of her Manhattan town house, textile scion Ashley Stark Kenner loved bringing her work home

By Hannah Martin Photography by Douglas Friedman Styled by Colin King

October 10, 2020

“We’ll just fix it up a little bit.”

That’s what Ashley Stark Kenner thought when she and husband Nick, founder and CEO of Just Salad, bought a town house on New York’s Upper East Side to make room for their growing family. The landmarked 19th-century building had a lot going for it—generous dimensions, a deep backyard, and, a rarity among town houses, lots of light. But at their first meeting with New York–based Lichten Architects, talk quickly shifted to “gut renovation.”

Subscribe today and get 2 free gifts!

Subscribe Now

“The façade was the only thing that stayed,” Kenner says now, three years later. “For a while, we didn’t have a roof. We didn’t have a floor. We dug out the basement, we added a top floor, we added terraces. If I showed you the before and after, you’d be like, ‘What?’ ”

In the living room of Ashley Stark kenner’s Manhattan home, 1957 Jansen chairs pull up to a custom oak dining table surrounded by Pierre Jeanneret chairs and a custom sofa surround a Kelvin faux bois wallpaper by Holland & Sherry. Serge Mouille chandelier; LaVerne cocktail table. Artworks by Julian Schnabel, Brent Wadden, mirrors from Newel; painting by Beverly Fishman. Douglas and Damien Hirst. © 2020 Julian Schnabel / Artists Rights Society Friedman (ARS), New York. © Damien Hirst and Science Ltd. All rights reserved / DACS, London / ARS, NY 2020 Douglas Friedman

As the senior vice president of design and creative director at the eight-decades-old textile titan Stark, she knew exactly what she wanted. And with a totally clean slate, she didn’t have to compromise. “I had a vision, and I stuck with it,” says Kenner, calling her aesthetic “laid-back, organic, beachy, a little bit French.”

Working closely with Kenner, architects Andrew Friedman and Kevin Lichten created a floor plan that functioned for family life and, as Friedman explains, “felt loftlike and modern but still like a traditional town house.” That sensibility extended to the decor, spearheaded by New York firm Aman & Meeks (with a heavy hand from Kenner herself).

The son’s custom bed, covered in a Holland & Sherry linen, flanked by Karl Springer lamps Douglas Friedman Artworks by Donald Baechler (above Desk) and Takashi Murakami (above Shearling-Covered Armchair) mix with an RH baby & child desk and chair and a chandelier from CB2 in the daughter’s room. © 2020 Donald Baechler / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York Douglas Friedman

“Ashley grew up in this business,” says James Aman. He and John Meeks have known her for more than a decade, having designed her first city apartment, before she was married. “Not only does she have an innate sense of style herself but she gets it, she understands it, she knows how to be current while staying classic.”

ADVERTISEMENT Ad Late summer lake trip? Vrbo

SEARCH HOMES

Kenner’s crystal-clear vision was ground-up, starting with the floors. Once the bones were rebuilt, there was Kenner, eight months pregnant with her third child, sifting through oak floorboards with Friedman. After months of searching for the perfect wood, she had finally found some reclaimed oak through LV Wood (a recommendation from her friend Nate Berkus) that resonated, and she hand-selected and placed each board into a chevron pattern. When it came time to lay the bathroom floors with marble from Artistic Tile, it was a similar scene. Kenner combed through boxes of tiles, selecting pieces with only the subtlest veining.

In the kitchen, painted Benjamin Moore Decorator’s White, the appliances are by Gaggenau, sink by Dornbracht, and chairs from Mecox. Douglas Friedman

ADVERTISEMENT

Rooms were assembled around her requests. Pierre Jeanneret’s iconic Chandigarh chairs were, as Meeks recalls, “on her bucket list,” and the rest of the living room came together around a pair scored via 1stdibs. Her idea for a wraparound sectional, modeled after a vintage Knoll piece, and a custom-made bookcase set the cozy tone in the den. And Gracie worked with her on a custom wallpaper for the powder room with a particular “distressed denim-blue” ground.

Much of the decor is custom made, mixing in with a thoughtful collection of vintage and antiques. A bespoke Vladimir Kagan–inspired sofa in the living room curves around the Kelvin LaVerne cocktail table Kenner brought with her from her last place. A cerused-oak vanity was constructed for her dressing room. And Jansen dining chairs gather around a bronze-inlaid oak farm table in the dining room, built with hidden leaves for hosting large family gatherings at holidays.

1 / 13

Douglas Friedman

In the library, painted in Benjamin Moore’s CobbleStone Path, a custom bookcase and sofa envelop a Willy Rizzo cocktail table. Moroccan rug from Stark. Hanging light by Apparatus. Art by Richard Estes.

The palette is reserved, preferring lush textures, rich materials, and subtle motifs over bold statements. “I’m surrounded by so much pattern and color in the showroom,” Kenner explains. “I always want my home to be more soothing.” Textiles are a big part of the equation, almost all of them Stark or Stark-owned brands and many of them prototypes she is testing out. “As I was developing the collection, I knew exactly what would go in each room,” she says of the carpets, which range from a shaggy Moroccan rug to sisal to custom textured shearling. Walls wear textiles too, some papered in faux bois, others covered in braided hemp or wool. Works of fine art, like a bold Beverly Fishman painting in the dining room and a woven fiber piece by Brent Wadden in the living room, deliver a few happy hits of color.

The vibe is casual and family-friendly, yet still sophisticated. An avid cook, Kenner created her dream kitchen, outfitted by Gaggenau (“The face of the oven never gets hot, which is great with kids”), and is happy to report that it’s now the go-to family zone. Sofas passed down from her mother have been recovered in performance fabrics (“When I was little, I was never allowed to touch them”). The playroom is bold and graphic in black and white (“The toys bring the color”), and it’s easy to imagine it becoming a hangout in the future. “I’m a strong believer in making kids’ spaces that don’t look like kids’ spaces,” Kenner says.

As for those kids, it seems they’re already cultivating the family taste for textiles. Despite all the spaces created just for them, Kenner reveals, “Their favorite thing in the house is the shearling carpet in my dressing room.”

1 / 19

Douglas Freidman

Kenner and her daughter at the living-room bar.

The Beautiful Homes And Celebrity Style You Dream About

Email Address

SIGN UP NOW

Will be used in accordance with our User Agreement and Privacy Policy & Cookie Statement

READ MORE

MAGAZINE CLEVER DECORATING + RENOVATION CLEVER Tour This Colorful This Notting Hill Jessie Schuster The Top Clever West Village Town Townhouse Features a Transforms a Spacious Renovation Stories of House 3-in-1 Living Space SoHo Loft Inside an… 2020

By Jane Keltner de Valle By Lauren Jones By Paola Singer By Sophia Herring

Sponsored Stories

ENHANCEYOURBROWS.… BRILLIANT EARTH SILVERSINGLES CADILLAC CT5 | SPONSO…

OM ED LISTINGS Beauty Surgeon 10 Tips To Make This Is Where the The All New Shares #1 At Your Diamond Majority of Cadillac CT5 Is Home Tip For… Look Bigger Singles Over 50… The Incredible Balding Brows Are Finding Love in Evanston

YOURHEALTHYGUT.COM MATERNITY WEEK LUXURY AUTO | SPONSO… BATHROOM REMODEL | … ED LISTINGS PONSORED LINKS Randy Jackson: Presidents The New 2020 See The Newest "This Drink Is Ranked By Their Volkswagen Trends In Like A… IQs Lineup Is Turnin… Bathroom… Powerwash For Heads PoweredRemodeling By Your Gut"

___

Subscriptions Connect with AD

Subscribe About AD Our website, archdigest.com, offers constant original Customer Service Contact the Editors coverage of the interior design and architecture worlds, Renew Subscription Newsletter Sign Up new shops and products, travel destinations, art and Give a Gift AD 360 cultural events, celebrity style, and high-end real estate as Change Address Contact Advertising well as access to print features and images from the AD archives.

Condé Nast Store | Careers | Site Map | Accessibility Help | Reprints / Permissions | Condé Nast Spotlight COOKIES SETTINGS

© 2021 Condé Nast. All rights reserved. Use of this site constitutes acceptance of our User Agreement (updated as of 1/1/21) and Privacy Policy and Cookie Statement (updated as of 1/1/21) and Your California Privacy Rights. Architectural Digest may earn a portion of sales from products that are purchased through our site as part of our Affiliate Partnerships with retailers. The material on this site may not be reproduced, distributed, transmitted, cached or otherwise used, except with the prior written permission of Condé Nast. Ad Choices SUBSCRIBE

MAGAZINE Step Inside Ashley Stark's Transformed Upper East Side Abode

During the head-to-toe renovation of her Manhattan town house, textile scion Ashley Stark Kenner loved bringing her work home

By Hannah Martin Photography by Douglas Friedman Styled by Colin King

October 10, 2020

“We’ll just fix it up a little bit.”

That’s what Ashley Stark Kenner thought when she and husband Nick, founder and CEO of Just Salad, bought a town house on New York’s Upper East Side to make room for their growing family. The landmarked 19th-century building had a lot going for it—generous dimensions, a deep backyard, and, a rarity among town houses, lots of light. But at their first meeting with New York–based Lichten Architects, talk quickly shifted to “gut renovation.”

Subscribe today and get 2 free gifts!

Subscribe Now

“The façade was the only thing that stayed,” Kenner says now, three years later. “For a while, we didn’t have a roof. We didn’t have a floor. We dug out the basement, we added a top floor, we added terraces. If I showed you the before and after, you’d be like, ‘What?’ ”

In the living room of Ashley Stark kenner’s Manhattan home, 1957 Jansen chairs pull up to a custom oak dining table surrounded by Pierre Jeanneret chairs and a custom sofa surround a Kelvin faux bois wallpaper by Holland & Sherry. Serge Mouille chandelier; LaVerne cocktail table. Artworks by Julian Schnabel, Brent Wadden, mirrors from Newel; painting by Beverly Fishman. Douglas and Damien Hirst. © 2020 Julian Schnabel / Artists Rights Society Friedman (ARS), New York. © Damien Hirst and Science Ltd. All rights reserved / DACS, London / ARS, NY 2020 Douglas Friedman

As the senior vice president of design and creative director at the eight-decades-old textile titan Stark, she knew exactly what she wanted. And with a totally clean slate, she didn’t have to compromise. “I had a vision, and I stuck with it,” says Kenner, calling her aesthetic “laid-back, organic, beachy, a little bit French.”

Working closely with Kenner, architects Andrew Friedman and Kevin Lichten created a floor plan that functioned for family life and, as Friedman explains, “felt loftlike and modern but still like a traditional town house.” That sensibility extended to the decor, spearheaded by New York firm Aman & Meeks (with a heavy hand from Kenner herself).

The son’s custom bed, covered in a Holland & Sherry linen, flanked by Karl Springer lamps Douglas Friedman Artworks by Donald Baechler (above Desk) and Takashi Murakami (above Shearling-Covered Armchair) mix with an RH baby & child desk and chair and a chandelier from CB2 in the daughter’s room. © 2020 Donald Baechler / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York Douglas Friedman

“Ashley grew up in this business,” says James Aman. He and John Meeks have known her for more than a decade, having designed her first city apartment, before she was married. “Not only does she have an innate sense of style herself but she gets it, she understands it, she knows how to be current while staying classic.”

ADVERTISEMENT Ad Late summer lake trip? Vrbo

SEARCH HOMES

Kenner’s crystal-clear vision was ground-up, starting with the floors. Once the bones were rebuilt, there was Kenner, eight months pregnant with her third child, sifting through oak floorboards with Friedman. After months of searching for the perfect wood, she had finally found some reclaimed oak through LV Wood (a recommendation from her friend Nate Berkus) that resonated, and she hand-selected and placed each board into a chevron pattern. When it came time to lay the bathroom floors with marble from Artistic Tile, it was a similar scene. Kenner combed through boxes of tiles, selecting pieces with only the subtlest veining.

In the kitchen, painted Benjamin Moore Decorator’s White, the appliances are by Gaggenau, sink by Dornbracht, and chairs from Mecox. Douglas Friedman

ADVERTISEMENT

Rooms were assembled around her requests. Pierre Jeanneret’s iconic Chandigarh chairs were, as Meeks recalls, “on her bucket list,” and the rest of the living room came together around a pair scored via 1stdibs. Her idea for a wraparound sectional, modeled after a vintage Knoll piece, and a custom-made bookcase set the cozy tone in the den. And Gracie worked with her on a custom wallpaper for the powder room with a particular “distressed denim-blue” ground.

Much of the decor is custom made, mixing in with a thoughtful collection of vintage and antiques. A bespoke Vladimir Kagan–inspired sofa in the living room curves around the Kelvin LaVerne cocktail table Kenner brought with her from her last place. A cerused-oak vanity was constructed for her dressing room. And Jansen dining chairs gather around a bronze-inlaid oak farm table in the dining room, built with hidden leaves for hosting large family gatherings at holidays.

1 / 13

Douglas Friedman

In the library, painted in Benjamin Moore’s CobbleStone Path, a custom bookcase and sofa envelop a Willy Rizzo cocktail table. Moroccan rug from Stark. Hanging light by Apparatus. Art by Richard Estes.

The palette is reserved, preferring lush textures, rich materials, and subtle motifs over bold statements. “I’m surrounded by so much pattern and color in the showroom,” Kenner explains. “I always want my home to be more soothing.” Textiles are a big part of the equation, almost all of them Stark or Stark-owned brands and many of them prototypes she is testing out. “As I was developing the collection, I knew exactly what would go in each room,” she says of the carpets, which range from a shaggy Moroccan rug to sisal to custom textured shearling. Walls wear textiles too, some papered in faux bois, others covered in braided hemp or wool. Works of fine art, like a bold Beverly Fishman painting in the dining room and a woven fiber piece by Brent Wadden in the living room, deliver a few happy hits of color.

The vibe is casual and family-friendly, yet still sophisticated. An avid cook, Kenner created her dream kitchen, outfitted by Gaggenau (“The face of the oven never gets hot, which is great with kids”), and is happy to report that it’s now the go-to family zone. Sofas passed down from her mother have been recovered in performance fabrics (“When I was little, I was never allowed to touch them”). The playroom is bold and graphic in black and white (“The toys bring the color”), and it’s easy to imagine it becoming a hangout in the future. “I’m a strong believer in making kids’ spaces that don’t look like kids’ spaces,” Kenner says.

As for those kids, it seems they’re already cultivating the family taste for textiles. Despite all the spaces created just for them, Kenner reveals, “Their favorite thing in the house is the shearling carpet in my dressing room.”

1 / 19

Douglas Freidman

Kenner and her daughter at the living-room bar.

The Beautiful Homes And Celebrity Style You Dream About

Email Address

SIGN UP NOW

Will be used in accordance with our User Agreement and Privacy Policy & Cookie Statement

READ MORE

MAGAZINE CLEVER DECORATING + RENOVATION CLEVER Tour This Colorful This Notting Hill Jessie Schuster The Top Clever West Village Town Townhouse Features a Transforms a Spacious Renovation Stories of House 3-in-1 Living Space SoHo Loft Inside an… 2020

By Jane Keltner de Valle By Lauren Jones By Paola Singer By Sophia Herring

Sponsored Stories

ENHANCEYOURBROWS.… BRILLIANT EARTH SILVERSINGLES CADILLAC CT5 | SPONSO… OM ED LISTINGS Beauty Surgeon 10 Tips To Make This Is Where the The All New Shares #1 At Your Diamond Majority of Cadillac CT5 Is Home Tip For… Look Bigger Singles Over 50… The Incredible Balding Brows Are Finding Love in Evanston

YOURHEALTHYGUT.COM MATERNITY WEEK LUXURY AUTO | SPONSO… BATHROOM REMODEL | … ED LISTINGS PONSORED LINKS Randy Jackson: Presidents The New 2020 See The Newest "This Drink Is Ranked By Their Volkswagen Trends In Like A… IQs Lineup Is Turnin… Bathroom… Powerwash For Heads PoweredRemodeling By Your Gut"

___

Subscriptions Connect with AD

Subscribe About AD Our website, archdigest.com, offers constant original Customer Service Contact the Editors coverage of the interior design and architecture worlds, Renew Subscription Newsletter Sign Up new shops and products, travel destinations, art and Give a Gift AD 360 cultural events, celebrity style, and high-end real estate as Change Address Contact Advertising well as access to print features and images from the AD archives.

Condé Nast Store | Careers | Site Map | Accessibility Help | Reprints / Permissions | Condé Nast Spotlight COOKIES SETTINGS

© 2021 Condé Nast. All rights reserved. Use of this site constitutes acceptance of our User Agreement (updated as of 1/1/21) and Privacy Policy and Cookie Statement (updated as of 1/1/21) and Your California Privacy Rights. Architectural Digest may earn a portion of sales from products that are purchased through our site as part of our Affiliate Partnerships with retailers. The material on this site may not be reproduced, distributed, transmitted, cached or otherwise used, except with the prior written permission of Condé Nast. Ad Choices