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In a festive round of mixing, scouting and shopping (such a job hazard in this line of business), I stopped by San Francisco's Zinc Details last night for the second annual S.F. Local Design Market.
The shop hosted twelve exhibitors—some of whom we already knew and loved, and some who were new to us. Read More...
A two-unit building in Cow Hollow gets re-scripted as a big, luxurious and family-sized house. Open on Sunday, June 16 from 2:00PM to 4:00PM, this spectacular renovation is a worth a visit.
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Bonding over a mutual love of art (specifically, Egon Schiele nudes), Los Angeles natives Chelsea Neman and Jordan Klein, both 24, could not have known that the friendship sparked during freshman orientation at the University of Michigan would evolve into a successful business partnership.
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For most of the year, the quiet beauty of Valle de Guadalupe’s sprawling vineyards and giant rust-hued boulders is disturbed only by the crowing of roosters or the occasional plaintive bray of a burro.
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Meridith Baer is the woman behind the largest home staging company in the world. Her company, Meridith Baer Home, has been designing interiors for magnificent country estates, swanky city lofts, and everything in between, creating beautiful and interesting spaces that feel like home. If staging hundreds of for-sale homes wasn't enough, Meridith also has two exciting side projects. The first is renting her insane warehouse of furnishings to L.A. set designers (it's the size of a couple airplane hangers!). The second is starring in her own brand new HGTV show, Staged to Perfection where Meridith and her team tackle luxury homes currently on the SoCal rental market.
The Meyerovich Gallery is the ideal spot for your artsy mind to run wild and absorb the saturated colors and luxurious textures that practically jump off the walls.
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We can't pinpoint a more iconic piece of Ikea furniture than the "LACK" table. It retails for between $8 and $13 depending on the color, and has shown up in more of our college apartments than we'd like to admit. Instead of relegating it to the basement, make it over with this simple Ikea hack.