5.13.2010

Darryl Carter

Darryl Carter

As an unhappy lawyer in need of a creative outlet, he designed homes. When one landed on the cover of Metropolitan Home in 1997, he abandoned law and hung out a design shingle. His rooms take a fresh approach to the traditional, marked by subtle palettes, art and antiques. A room is not complete, he says, without “a fantastic piece of art and a variety of time-worn books.”

Patricia Lyons Photography


My Design Yoda

If you like historic houses, worn antiques, natural materials, curved lines, the old tried and true - but you also like - modern architecture, industrial design, man made materials, straight lines, hard edges, and The Cutting Edge...

If you have a house full of fine traditional furniture, but you long to free yourself of clutter, confusion and material baggage...

What do you do?

You pay close attention to Darryl Carter.

About the time I decided to reinvent my house, short of tossing everything out, I discovered Darryl Carter and his book The New Traditional. I don't just look at the pictures of this one; I read every word.

I'm convinced that if you edit things sparingly, even a fossil will look new. Likewise, if everything you own is modern, but it's packed into every nook and cranny, your house will look high Victorian. Sparing looks new, clutter looks old. Simple as that. Carter proves that theory with his new traditional approach to decorating, and what a breath of fresh air it is.

His sense of design is so unerring that when I needed a good set of whites for my house, rather than test-swatch dozens of paint colors, I cut right to the chase and used his favorites: Benjamin Moore's Moonlight White on the walls and Simply White on the trim. All my main rooms are now thusly anointed and absolutely right, under all light conditions.

His book The New Traditional has become my new testament. When I get religious about atoning for the sins of my last remodel, and read his scripture for good design, I understand where I went wrong. He has an easy way of explaining things. Hallelujah!

Today I added eight posts curating much of his work, because I want it here and handy. Have a look and maybe Darryl Carter will become your design yoda too.


Darryl Carter ✦ On the Internet

Darryl Carter ✦ The New Traditional

Darryl Carter ✦ D.C. Townhouse

Darryl Carter ✦ Virginia Farmhouse

Darryl Carter ✦ His Parents' Kitchen

Darryl Carter ✦ Loft Apartment

Darryl Carter ✦ Thomasville

Darryl Carter ✦ Threads Collection


Darryl Carter

5.11.2010

Darryl Carter ✦ On the Internet

Darryl Carter
In the living room, a sofa designed by Carter and an Italian nail-studded armchair are upholstered in oatmeal linen and Edelman Leather's dyed cowhide, repsectively; the round antique table is from Scottish Connection.



Darryl Carter's Website

Darryl Carter, The New Traditional on Facebook

The New Traditional by Darryl Carter

Darryl Carter video for Benjamin Moore

Darryl Carter designs for The Urban Electric Company

Darryl Carter designs for Frontgate

Darryl Carter designs for Threads by Lee Jofa

Darryl Carter Designs for Thomasville

Promotional shoot for The New Traditional

VT Interiors

Habitually Chic

Please Sir

Room Lust

Darryl Carter on Google Search

Darryl Carter on Google Images




Darryl Carter / at home

At Home with Darryl Carter

At Home magazine
Summer 2010

A master at blending classic and modern, this leading designer reveals his favorite fabric, go-to paint colors, and tricks of the trade for creating a comfortable, timeless home.

What inspires me... The evolution of design. All things return to their historical reference. The iconic Egg chair, for instance, is a modern offspring of the wing chair. For me, this is why the modern and the antique marry so well.

My design motto is... Good design is everlasting. Avoid trends.

Latest obsession... Not obsessing. It helps with a little thing called mental health.

Top summer vacation spot... My tiny cottage in The Plains, Virginia. Sequestered by a 150-foot, wisteria-covered pergola, it is bygone in its simplicity and gentility - an absolute departure from my city home. At night, hung with lanterns, the pergola is a veritable allée, which is absolutely enveloping when in full bloom. I was struck by this property for years in passing, and one day my real estate agent called to describe a new listing. I knew it instantly and bought it two days later.

Favorite paint shade other than white... If you insist on something "other than white" (Benjamin Moore Moonlight White is my go-to), I like Benjamin Moore Moonshine OC-56. It's a chalky, grayish, brownish, moody classic color.

Favorite fabric... Rogers & Goffigon linen, which has a phenomenal hand.

What I'm reading now... I have to admit that I am a little ADD, so I tend to read several books at once, which proves to be highly entertaining when I'm sharing my most recent reads with others. I love any historic biography. Right now I am reading American Prometheus: The Triumph and Tragedy of J. Robert Oppenheimer by Kai Bird and Martin J. Sherwin, dovetailing with The Follies and Garden Buildings of Ireland by James Howley.

Favorite piece of furniture... The Carlton House desk in my study in Washington, D.C. It is an incredible form replete with all kinds of hidden drawers and depository hardware at its top, as I believe it was once used in a bank. Other than this piece, I like all things Campaign. I am fascinated by metamorphic furniture and its varied utility.

I love a home filled with... Good friends for a casual dinner with great wine.

I can't live without... Laughter, talking to my mother on the phone every day, and spending time with my three disobedient dogs, Otis, Lucy, and Gus. They are far more agreeable company than most human beings, especially at day's end. Man's best friend - no joke! Whoever first said that knew what they were talking about.

One thing you might not know about me... Every now and then, when inspired, I will take on a canvas and paint. Also, I am told that I have a wicked sense of humor.




Darryl Carter / The Urban Electric Company


DESIGNER: Darryl Carter, Washington, D.C.

Design Today
May 31, 2009

From the fall 2008 issue of Design Today: designer Darryl Carter discusses second homes

Darryl Carter is an attorney who left practice when his own home landed on the cover of Metropolitan Home. Thereafter, he received a number of would-be client inquiries which finally led him to open his own firm. Darryl has had a furniture collection with NeimanMarcus and currently has a collection at Thomasville, as well as Frontage and The Urban Electric Company, with others in the works. His book The New Traditional (Random House/ Clarkson Potter) has had a record reception.

Style:

Modern, traditional, collected

Your second home ideal:

The one that got away -- a mid-century concrete warehouse, former hydro-electric plant, buttressed by a cascading dam, surrounded by a multitude of grain silos in the remote Virginia countryside.

Popular second home locales for your clients:

All places remote.

Are most of your second home projects executed as designs for new or existing properties?

They generally tend to be renovations of historic properties.

What’s different about designing/decorating for primary residences vs. vacation homes?

Commissions other than primary residences tend to be geared toward comfort. So, the vocabulary is always a fascinating departure from the principal home.

How important is low-maintenance? Energy efficiency? Technology? Spaces for entertaining? Use of green/sustainable products?

As most of these commissions have been historic, the primary emphasis has been the use of reclaimed materials to respect the original architecture. This can often involve exhaustive hunts for just the right element, right down to the door knocker.

Do your clients spend more or less on second homes as compared to their primary residences?

I think sometimes my clients are more passionate about their second homes given the intensity of their lifestyles. The retreat has great significance.

Does old money decorate differently than new money?

I find that most of the clients who engage me have a very specific design sense.

What’s in?

My clients tend toward quiet palettes and time-honored forms from the modern to the antique.

If you were invited to design a new line of furnishings for the second home market, what would your product line consist of?

I would be consistent with my penchant for the eclectic mixture of things sensing old and new. I would probably be more creative with finishes and textiles that could support climate changes.




Gordone Beall


In Conversation with Darryl Carter

By Iván Meade
Meade Design Group
May 17, 2009

Darryl Carter has progressively become a renowned design influence. His work is routinely featured in major shelter publications. Likewise, he is highly active on the lecture circuit and he has appeared on a variety of television networks.

This has not gone unnoticed by the industry, as he continues to make his designs more accessible through a series of branding relationships throughout the home category. This past fall saw the publication of his first book, The New Traditional (Clarkson Potter) and the launch of Darryl Carter for Thomasville(www.thomasville.com/darrylcarter/), his new comprehensive full home collection with Thomasville Furniture, distinguished by the sensibility of having been collected over time and true to the design aesthetic that he has become known for.

Darryl also has a stunning lighting collection with The Urban Electric Company www.urbanelectricco.com, and this spring Frontgate www.frontgate.com will debut his first outdoor collection.

Carter specializes in calming environments with subtle colour palettes in which textures play off of one another and striking furniture layouts create one of a kind spaces. His mantra is that no two environments should be alike, just as no two individuals are alike. While keeping that in mind his environments exemplify the "New Traditional", incorporating clean design through the use of antiques and unique pieces that give his spaces a sense of grace and comfort. Simple moldings and architectural details painted out in chalky off-whites create a crisp envelope respectful of the architecture and furniture pieces. Spaces are distinguished by personal effects such as antique books, art and artifacts which evoke memories of days past. Patina is shown with pride. Intricate patterns such as herringbone or marquetry with borders are created with tile work alongside a delicately arabesque-shaped railing with a contrasting stain. Ambient lighting is sensitive to the mood of a room and window treatments are the simplest wooden shutters or linen drapery. The goal is that each environment is welcoming, graceful, timeless and foremost reflective of the individual.

Please read on to learn more about Darryl Carter and his work...

Iván Meade - What was your first experience with design?

Darryl Carter: I think I have always had a penchant for the aesthetic arts. My mother seems to have a memory of me moving furniture around my small childhood bedroom at age 6.

Who or what has influenced your style?

I have a very dear friend who is presently an antiques dealer in New York. We go way back. Her mother was very forward in her design. When others were doing circular sofas and shag carpet, she had the most austere 19th century farmhouse with no embellishments, simple American furniture, Pre-Colombian artifacts and the moodiest portraiture, all simply placed. These spaces continue to speak to me.

What was the career change like from lawyer to designer?

The career change was freeing and perhaps immanent. But for serendipity, it may not have happened. It’s a complicated tale, but the short version is that I was a weekend warrior and on the side I was exercising my passion by re-doing and flipping real estate. One of the properties I lived in landed on the cover of Metropolitan Home and I received a number of phone calls requesting private commissions. And so, the career change had begun.

What designers of past and present do you admire most?

Thomas Jefferson, as architect; Jorn Utzon, his biography and work; Van Day Truex, as a visionary; Bill Blass, for his Connecticut Home and so many others.

What do you consider to be your greatest strength and your greatest weakness?

One in the same: my passion for what I do.

What do you look for in a furniture piece, alternatively what do you consider as being important factors when designing a furniture piece?

Purity, grace of line and multi-function.

Are there any design rules that you think were meant to be broken?

All rules are meant to be broken. This is evolution.

What has been your greatest collaboration?

I cannot speak to this; I am bound to step on several toes. I have had many.

What books are currently on your bedside or coffee table?

Avoid Boring People by James D Watson; The Last Campaign, Robert F. Kennedy and 82 Days that Inspired America by Thurston Clarke; Original Story by Arthur Laurents and Audels Carpenters and Builders Guides #1 – #4 by Frank D. Graham – Chief and Thomas J. Emery – Associate.

What are you excited about right now in the world of design?

I am seeing a more liberated risk-taking consumer that is in search of self-expression in the home, rather than manufactured environments that are formulaic.

What would be your dream project?

I am working on my dream project. The renovation of my new office in a pre-civil war building in a very vibrant, emergent part of the District of Columbia.

What project has given you the most satisfaction?

My residence which will never be complete, it is my laboratory.

What is your next design venture?

I am working on multiple home license deals and a television show.

Lastly, you have already created a stunning body of work with many mediums and styles. What would you like your legacy to be?

A respect and appreciation for the simple.

Check out the June issue of Metropolitan Home Magazine's "Design 100" featuring editor's picks of the top 100 designs of the year. Among their picks is the Triple Bel Air Bench from Darryl Carter's collection for Thomasville.




Darryl Carter / Thomasville / HGTV


Darryl's Advice

HGTV

Darryl Carter approaches the Darryl Carter ® for Thomasville ® furniture collection as he does his own interiors. Discover how to creatively redefine your home. Courtesy of Thomasville ®.

Click on each image to view large.


Darryl Carter / Thomasville / HGTV

Tip #1 Elevate to expand. Enhance the sense of space within a room by placing furniture pieces that are elevated — uncovered canopies, tall legs — that allow light to flow through and around.

Furniture that hugs the floor can visually crowd a room with its mass and block the flow of light. To visually expand a small space or lend serenity to any room, choose furniture that is graceful in its architecture. Here, light from tall windows washes freely through the open frame of the Savannah poster bed, Wellington center table (left), Rowman’s cellaret, Bel Air bench, Collette chair and the pierced frame of the Cape standing floor mirror.


Darryl Carter / Thomasville / HGTV

Tip #2 Fine tune style with finish mix. Dark finishes impart an air of formality; light woods strike a more relaxed or contemporary chord. Adjust the mix to reflect your personal level of comfort.

Here, a highly restrained color palette focuses attention on the scene’s tonal and graphic elements. A soft driftwood finish on the versatile Rollins pedestal side table relaxes its classic architecture and substantial presence. Its shared provenance with the accompanying low-key Repertoire bed makes the two comfortable companions. The setting is further harmonized by the bed’s mottled tortoise finish and brown linens echo the dark inset leather top on the table.


Darryl Carter / Thomasville / HGTV

Tip #3 Think thin. Including a slender, vertical furniture element in a room’s landscape adds naturally pleasing height variety while utilizing a sometimes challenging narrow space.

The 60-inch tall Repertoire semainier chest makes a graceful statement with its slender height and refined proportions. The adjacent poster bed mirrors the verticality with an open frame that’s statuesque, but not overpowering. A semainier offers an attractive way to enhance and utilize a narrow wall space while providing eminently useful storage for small items like socks and scarves. Oxidized hardware on the tortoise finish picks up the bed’s darker tone.


Darryl Carter / Thomasville / HGTV

Tip #4 Find perfection in imperfection. Think counter intuitively as you evolve your space.

It's easy to become preoccupied with perfection. Faultless matching creates a static environment. Your home should have individual expression. Even in this carefully thought out setting, rumpled bed linens on the Savannah poster bed and casual magazines on the versatile Herald storage bench paint a less-than-perfect picture, setting a tone of ease that makes the room feel more welcoming.


Darryl Carter / Thomasville / HGTV

Tip #5 Add dimensionality through the subtle integration of texture. A blended mix of materials makes a room feel less methodical and thoughtful in terms of its furniture pairing.

Patinated finishes, worn rugs, crackled leather, distressed wood — a captivating mix of textures and materials creates visual depth and a collected, timeworn look that welcomes you to experience a space. Accessories atop the Marc server are united by their graphically simple forms and subtle relationships to each other. Finish color ties the modern metal lamp to the very traditional Belgravia mirror, whose texture, in turn, echoes the repetitive pattern on the round Eyelet vase.


Darryl Carter / Thomasville / HGTV

Tip #6 Add architecture to a space. Here the salon screen adds instant architecture and volume to the space.

Darryl Carter's new traditional style succeeds by not taking itself too seriously. The Wesex wing chair is a good example. While classic in its form, the design is distinctly modern. Its scale makes it suitable as a standalone accent chair or unorthodox head chair for dining or paired at a partners desk.


Darryl Carter / Thomasville / HGTV

Tip #7 Be true to your lifestyle. Successful rooms are comfortable, enduring and suit your individual lifestyle. Think about how you actually live in a space. Avoid trend. A room should not need to be redecorated once furnished.

Good design accommodates how you really live. For instance, to relieve formality in a dining room, place chairs that are in a different finish than the table. Likewise a settee in lieu of chairs can make a dining room more welcoming. Add an elegant lamp on top of the Wellington table beside a comfortable Bowman chair and ottoman. All these together create an instant reading niche. Create a collected sense by integrating different finishes so that rooms don’t feel instant or static. You and your guests will welcome the personal, comfortable, enduring environment of a home that feels lived in.


Darryl Carter / Thomasville / HGTV

Tip #8 Maintain the intimate appearance of a room without overwhelming it with more furniture than you would routinely use.

The Bel Air bench brings a sculptural quality and function to any room. Placed under a foyer table it lends a discreet sculptural element but can be pulled out to accommodate extra guests in the living room. Likewise, it can work well in a bathroom holding your waiting towel. At once formal and relaxed, its graceful lines complement classic settings and accent modern ones.


Darryl Carter / Thomasville / HGTV

Tip #9 Allow beautiful furnishings to shine. A neutral setting respects the sculptural lines or architectural features of the furniture elements in your room. This a good place to start before integrating color or pattern.

If you choose your furniture for its beauty as well as its utility, it makes sense to show it in its best light. By silhouetting forms against neutral backdrops, intriguing details and sculptural lines are coaxed to speak. Here, the subtle simplicity of the classic Jared chest takes on accessible stature against white walls and an unorthodox whitewashed floor. The intricate surface of the Belgravia mirror above draws out the chest’s dappled tortoise finish.


Darryl Carter / Thomasville / HGTV

Tip #10 Maintain a balance. Maintain harmony and interest within a room by balancing furnishings and architectural features in one area of a room with elements of similar scale on the opposing side.

It’s tempting to crowd furniture around an inviting focal point like a fireplace or picture window. But like balancing passengers in a small boat, it’s advisable to keep the weight of a room evenly distributed. There are various ways to achieve this: Situate furnishings away from walls. In the context of larger spaces, create multiple seating environments within a single room to accommodate both small and large gatherings. Oppose a substantial furniture piece like the Tabard secretary perhaps opposite an equally important architectural element within a room such as a fireplace or large painting.




Gordone Beall


A Chat With Darryl Carter

This designer and former attorney likes to take a rational approach to interiors to create a sense of restrained elegance

by Molly Pastor
Southern Accents
May/June 2008

Washington, D.C., designer Darryl Carter grew up in Maryland, graduated from Georgetown law school, and spent his early years as an attorney, so his penchant for classic, rational interiors is understandable. But what makes us return to his work again and again is his ability to take the refined and loosen it up a bit. He chooses his words as sparingly and thoughtfully as he does accessories, all for an extremely well-edited mix.

Southern Accents: What does a Darryl Carter space look and feel like?

Darryl Carter: Rooms should be both beautiful and functional. A number of my commissions are predominated by art, so the objective is to create rooms that respect those objects while remaining intimate. An environment should be welcoming, and this is achieved by using approachable textiles and integrating timeworn objects.

Your rooms are classic, very up-to-date, and never trendy. How do you make traditional look so fresh?

By pairing classic, time-honored forms with unorthodox textiles. Many antique pieces have a striking simplicity when executed in an unexpected fabric. Typically, I juxtapose these pieces against modern art in a relatively monochrome palette.

What designers, past and present, inspire you?

First, I would start with architect John Pawson. Picture a modern, glass box on a very private beach, with landscapes inspired by the late Dan Kiley. Also, Thomas Jefferson. Monticello is as brilliant today as it was when it was designed. Bill Blass' Connecticut home was perfection. And I admire Axel Vervoordt for his dexterity.

We've noticed that you use mostly solid fabrics. What do you do if your clients request rooms with patterns and prints?

I deliver them with a restrained palette, often using patterned material on its reverse so that it does not graphically overwhelm, but rather suggests more of a watercolor. This generally produces visual calm. The trick is a sensitivity to scale and balance.

Are there things that you feel have to be new and some pieces that you prefer to be antique?

I love the patina of a well-worn antique, but on a practical note, a credible reproduction might work just as well. Upholstered pieces can be better new for comfort. Good is good.

Name some of your favorite artists who complement your style.

I have a tremendous respect for Cy Twombly, Willem de Kooning, Franz Klein, and Pablo Picasso's early sculptures. And I support a number of emerging artists, including William Willis, Mahmoud Hamadani, Meredith Pardue, and Linn Meyers.

What's next on your horizon?

I have a book titled The New Traditional (Clarkson Potter, 2008, $45) that is expected to be available by early fall. It is a beautifully illustrated "self-help" guide to creating your own interior. I also have a home collection for Thomasville, debuting this spring at High Point Market and coming out this fall. It's very diverse and speaks to a range of tastes -- I wanted to give people varied and accessible options so that no two homes are alike.




Darryl Carter


Darryl Carter's Look

And How to Get It

By Jura Koncius
The Washington Post
April 12, 2007

Darryl Carter, working from inherent good taste rather than formal training, has achieved something quite rare in the world of interior decorating: a signature look.

You see it featured in the pages of glossy magazines and in local design houses. You see it in the rooms of his upscale clients and in the furniture and lighting collections he has designed. You see it the minute you step into his five-story townhouse on Embassy Row in Northwest Washington.

The Look pairs extravagant with affordable, perfect with imperfect. Polished surfaces play against pitted wooden artifacts. Antiques converse with bold modern art. Creamy white walls rise above coffee-dark floors. Deliberate symmetry is jolted by a bit of appealing disarray.

The yin-yang balance, refined over nine years in the business, has brought the lawyer-turned-designer to the top tier of Washington decorating. "You have to make the environment pleasing to the eye but comfortable enough to live in," says Carter, putting down a glass of iced tea -- directly, no coaster -- on the well-worn pine table in his breakfast room overlooking Rock Creek Park. "It has to be both practical and beautiful."

Carter has not followed the usual path to design. Growing up in Bethesda, he was always fascinated with art and architecture. Though he dreamed of studying design, he graduated from Georgetown law school and joined a law firm. But along the way, he was continually buying properties and fixing them up: a Capitol Hill townhouse, an apartment in Dupont Circle and another in Kalorama's Altamont building.

By then it was 1997 and Carter was coming into his own. Metropolitan Home's design director, Linda O'Keeffe, ran his elegant white and beige place in the Altamont on the cover of the magazine with the headline "The New Traditional." After being published in a book on Washington interiors the following year ("Private Washington," Rizzoli), Carter found himself in the decorating business.

The path to a new career has given Carter a chance to refurbish Georgian houses, lofts and farms for CEOs and art collectors. In 2001, he designed a furniture collection for Neiman Marcus, and last year he introduced classically inspired lighting for Urban Electric Co. He has appeared on HGTV's "Dream House" series. Most recently, he signed a deal with Thomasville for a line of home furnishings and has collaborated with high-end catalogue retailer Frontgate. He published a coffee-table book on his style in 2008.

His home on Massachusetts Avenue, once the Embassy of Oman chancery, is a case study in The Look. The breakfast-room chairs may be prized Gustavian antiques, but the seats are unpretentious imitation leather. Some of the white ironstone pitchers and platters arranged against a pale blue wall date back to England, 1800; others to Ikea, 2007. Three black-and-white photos of Carter's German short-haired pointer, Otis, have been elevated to art. Two-foot pewter candlesticks still have wax drips from a recent gathering. "You light the candles and throw a big bowl of spaghetti on the table, and you have a great conversation, never worrying about the wax or putting the hot plate on the table," Carter says.

The designer likes "signs of life" in a home, such as the crackled top on an old burled table and the scratches on his ebonized floors; he invites guests to bring their dogs. "A house should be a respite, not a hotel room."

Clients seeing the place are drawn to the sense of serenity, sophistication and comfort. "I remember sitting in the living room and saying to Darryl, 'You could just do this room for me,' " recalls David Goodhand, a Microsoft technology specialist who has hired Carter to design a Foggy Bottom condo. Although there will be a lot of high-end pieces, he knows Carter will keep in mind Goodhand's 8-year-old son. "Don't choose things that are so precious that you are fearful of using them," the designer says.

O'Keeffe of Met Home magazine still follows Carter's work and believes he has an even more confident hand today. "He pares down traditional so it becomes modern and contemporary," she says.

Darryl Carter ✦ The New Traditional

The New Traditional: Reinvent-Balance-Define Your Home


The New Traditional

Reinvent | Balance | Define Your Home

Darryl Carter is a leader in the design world, recognized for his restrained, distinguished, and livable environments. Known for seamlessly mixing the modern with the classical, Carter presents a comprehensive guide to creating a home that balances individual comfort with a timeless aesthetic.

Comfort is the essential element of a successful interior, but also the most elusive. Too often our design decisions are driven by others. In The New Traditional, Darryl Carter encourages you to be true to your own lifestyle. More than a stunning book, this is an accessible resource for making an elegant, inviting home, responsive to the people who live in it every day.

A fresh take on American design, Carter’s work has been lauded as the New Traditional for effortlessly blending classic and modern elements to create personal environments. Patinated furniture, subtle textiles and lighting, and chalky washes of color are among the details that transform a house into a home. Carter explains how you can translate these details into inspired and always calming surroundings. Ignore the obvious. Redefine a dining room so that it doubles as a library by lining the walls with bookshelves and using wing chairs in lieu of dining chairs. Stain wood floors white to create a greater sense of space. Build rooms around art. Carter shows that designing your home is a process to be enjoyed.



Darryl Carter's New Traditional Style

By HGTV

Gain valuable insight in how to best develop rooms throughout the home. Indulge yourself here with a taste of Darryl Carter's The New Traditional.

Furniture designer Darryl Carter uncovers his clients’ common classic vocabulary, melding their tastes into soothing, understated timeless environments. The guiding principles and careful decision-making behind Carter’s impeccable aesthetic are revealed in his beautifully illustrated first book, The New Traditional (Random House/Clarkson Potter).

ADAPT – Make Your Home Work for You

Oft-confusing decisions about style become secondary when you define your ultimate goal as comfort, with rooms that are consistent with the way you really live. Re-thinking your home might even avoid the disruptive prospect of having to move in order to accommodate change in your life.

Darryl Carter / The New Traditional / HGTV +

DEFINE – Identify Your Style, Then Forget the Rules

Steer your design process with a personal design vocabulary that defines your unique approach to style. Natural, rustic, masculine, feminine, geometric, free flowing. What are the shared characteristics of the things and homes you admire and on the pages you tear from magazines? Let these elements guide the planning of your home. Groupings of pieces with a shared vocabulary have a lasting quality; they also can be easily moved about the home as your needs may change.

Darryl Carter / The New Traditional / HGTV +

BLEND – Use Continual Color and Space Planning to Achieve Flow

Judicious use of soft, muted color imbues a home with a sense of calm and amplified space. In Darryl Carter’s hand, muted color gradations on surfaces, furnishings and fabrics unfold naturally, flowing almost imperceptibly from room to room. Unlike trends that are soon outdated, low-key neutral classic hues endure.

Darryl Carter / The New Traditional / HGTV +

FOCUS – Collect with an Eye Toward Visual Harmony

Be it china, antique books, ironstone or shells, collections help personalize our space. In assembling a display, remember that “opposites distract” and “like-kind,” says Darryl Carter. A collection and display of items with shared purpose, form, and color – such as china, all with blue patterns – read as a singular composition that is visually harmonious. Arranging items together in a contained area, such as a bookshelf or hutch, unifies further. Carter also considers the balance and flow of scale.

RELAX – Know When to Stop

You’ve layered muted classic color, added just the right comfortable, practical and visually appealing furniture and accented with objects for textural interest. Your home is relaxing and truly suits your lifestyle. The decorating is done. To retain the inviting feel, resist the impulse to continue to fill every square inch. Remain alert, however, to evolving needs that rouse, again, your creative spirit.

Learn more about Darryl Carter and The New Traditional:

Darryl Carter

Thomasville

Buy the book

Darryl Carter ✦ D.C. Townhouse

Darryl Carter / Simon Upton / Elle Decor



Darryl Carter's D.C. Townhouse

The designer's minimalist style delivers maximum impact

Designed by Darryl Carter
Written by Mitchell Owens
Photographed by Simon Upton
Produced By Anita Sarsidi
Published by Elle Decor



Darryl Carter / Simon Upton / Elle Decor

Decorator and furniture designer Darryl Carter at his Washington, D.C., townhouse with Otis, his German shorthaired pointer.



Darryl Carter / Simon Upton / Elle Decor

A wall relief by Margaret Boozer and a 19th-century grand piano in the living room.



Darryl Carter / Simon Upton / Elle Decor

Reclaimed Belgian shutters from Added Oomph! and an 18th-century Regency table in the living room; the polished-poured-cement cocktail tables are by Boozer, the circa-1920 sofa is upholstered in an Edelman leather, and the sisal is by Stark Carpet.



Darryl Carter / Simon Upton / Elle Decor

The library’s wing chair served as the inspiration for the Wesex wing chair by Darryl Carter for Thomasville; the Carlton House desk is antique, the shutters and chandelier are from Allison’s Adam & Eve, and the mantel was designed by Carter.



Darryl Carter / Simon Upton / Elle Decor

An antique Italian étagère in the kitchen; the wine refrigerator is by Sub-Zero, and the range and hood are by Viking.



Darryl Carter / Simon Upton / Elle Decor

The kitchen features custom-made cabinetry and granite countertops.



Darryl Carter / Simon Upton / Elle Decor

The dining room’s concrete table by Bevara Design House is flanked by Carter-designed chairs upholstered in an Edelman leather; the gilt mirror is antique.



Darryl Carter / Simon Upton / Elle Decor

The breakfast room’s bookcases were the model for the Van Dorn cabinet by Darryl Carter for Thomasville; the light fixture is 19th century, and the floor is French limestone.



Darryl Carter / Simon Upton / Elle Decor

Architectural fragments are displayed in front of a pair of bathtubs salvaged from the Russian embassy; the shutters were designed by Carter, and the secretary is 18th century.



Darryl Carter / Simon Upton / Elle Decor

A porter chair and Carter-designed desk in the master bedroom; a bronze sculpture sits atop a vintage Parsons table, and the convex mirror is 19th century.



Darryl Carter / Simon Upton / Elle Decor

In the master bedroom, antique bordello doors behind the bed.



Darryl Carter / Simon Upton / Elle Decor

The vanity in the master bath was adapted from a 20th-century server.



Darryl Carter / Simon Upton / Elle Decor

In a guest room, a wing chair from Vilnis & Co. Antiques is upholstered in a Manuel Canovas fabric; the wall color is by Benjamin Moore, and the rug is from Timothy Paul Carpets + Textiles.



Darryl Carter / Simon Upton / Elle Decor

The limestone façade of the Beaux Arts townhouse on Embassy Row.




Darryl Carter's D.C. Townhouse

The designer's minimalist style delivers maximum impact

Designed by Darryl Carter
Written by Mitchell Owens
Photographed by Simon Upton
Produced By Anita Sarsidi
Published by Elle Decor

For some people, their residences become richer as time passes and accumulations mount. Washington, D.C.–based decorator and furniture designer Darryl Carter has a different definition of environmental luxury: Less is more.

“Everything here is getting sparer and sparer, and the juxtapositions are becoming increasingly confident,” Carter says of his townhouse, an elegant limestone Beaux Arts building on Embassy Row dating from 1910 and once the chancery of the sultanate of Oman. The contents of its rooms have been cut nearly in half in the past several years, while the subtle textures the decorator has always employed have given way to an even more refined aesthetic. The bright colors he formerly embraced in his art collection—among the most notable was a dramatic lemon-yellow painting presiding over one wall of the dining room—are now replaced with muted shades that match the rest of the house’s palette, mainly biscuit, linen, and palest gray, all offset with dark accents and fields of chalk-white.

“A person’s taste evolves, and changing my own houses is one of the pleasures of my job,” says Carter, author of The New Traditional: Reinvent-Balance-Define Your Home (Clarkson Potter, 2008). Here the resulting look—serenely unified, strong and uncompromising—is reminiscent of the gutsy style of fashion designer Bill Blass, who, after living for years in sumptuous spaces, began eliminating the extraneous and treating furniture and accessories as sculpture. Carter’s merciless campaign of simplification can be seen from the lofty foyer (where a modernist cement chair stands next to a plain Louis XVI table) to the master bath (where two stark-white tubs salvaged from the nearby Russian embassy sit side by side in the company of a towering 18th-century secretary). And as far as he is concerned, it’s not over yet. “The next time you see this place it will be white walls and absolutely nothing else!” the corporate lawyer turned designer jokes. “But it will be beautiful.”

In fact, the five-story residence backing onto historic Rock Creek Park can be examined as an object lesson in how unsentimental editing can yield captivating interiors and heightened sensuality. By erasing folderol and cooling the chromatic temperature, Carter has shifted the focus of his rooms from merely pleasing to deeply soulful. Having fewer visual distractions means less-appreciated elements come to the forefront: the grain of a walnut veneer, the line of a desk, the profile of a bronze sculpture, the weave of a sisal rug. With this decorative philosophy in play, the designer’s comment about confident juxtapositions becomes crystal clear.

Carter had his upholsterer remove the faded covering on the headboard and footboard of a guest room’s Louis XV–style bed to expose the worn burlap beneath, creating a compelling contrast between the rough textile and the curvaceous framework. In the master bedroom, antique animal horns hang adjacent to a leather-clad cockfighting chair, and a zebra skin stretches beneath a Carter-designed desk; in other rooms, the windows are dressed not with curtains but with raised-panel shutters that look like ancient double doors. And the living room’s 1920s white leather sofa sits behind a pair of low asymmetrical cocktail tables that are actually rectangular slabs of poured polished cement made for Carter by one of his favorite local artists, Margaret Boozer. “They look uncomplicated, but the tables are an engineering marvel,” the designer says, plainly delighted with the results of the commission.

His decision to embrace calm, cool hues throughout the house is a valuable lesson too. It allows for honing one’s eye, making it easier to gravitate to a more exclusive array of furnishings and objects. “I can wax on and on about the utility of a neutral palette,” says Carter, who has always had a yen for no-color decor, even though not all of his clients share that passion. “It’s particularly helpful for people starting out with their first apartment or house. You can move things from room to room more easily.”

A case in point is one of the designer’s pride and joys: an 18th-century English secretary whose age-crackled veneer gives it the appearance of tortoiseshell. Initially placed in the living room, it quickly migrated to the master bath, which shares the same muted shade with every other space in the house. “I enjoy the secretary just as much there, and it has lots of utility,” Carter says. “It’s a great holder of stuff—mail, stationery, my iPod, whatever.” He adds with a laugh, “Junk is actually everywhere in this house. It’s OCD on the surface, but there’s disorganization and clutter behind every drawer front and door.” Which may present some problems when Carter ultimately goes completely minimal. Until then, he says, “I’m a good hider.”

Darryl Carter ✦ Virginia Farmhouse

Darryl Carter / Simon Upton / Elle Decor


The Peace Keeper

Designer Darryl Carter modernizes his 19th-century Virginia farmhouse with bold gestures and a soothing palette

Designed by Darryl Carter
Written by Jura Koncius
Photographed by Simon Upton
Produced By Anita Sarsidi
Published by Elle Decor

Click on each image for larger versions.



Darryl Carter / Simon Upton / Elle Decor

The wing chair and taxidermy boar head in the living room are antiques, the lamp is made from an old candle stand, and the curtain fabric is by Manuel Canovas; the fireplace surround was pargeted in stucco.



Darryl Carter / Simon Upton / Elle Decor

Interior designer Darryl Carter at his 19th-century farmhouse in Virginia with his dogs, Otis and Lucy.



Darryl Carter / Simon Upton / Elle Decor

In the living room, a sofa designed by Carter and an Italian nail-studded armchair are upholstered in oatmeal linen and Edelman Leather's dyed cowhide, respectively; the round antique table is from Scottish Connection.



Darryl Carter / Simon Upton / Elle Decor

Carriage lanterns flank a silversmith's table in the foyer; the boar heads are antique, and the large ceramic vessel is Korean.



Darryl Carter / Simon Upton / Elle Decor

Carter designed the farm table in the breakfast room; the English daybed and tooled-leather chair are antique.



Darryl Carter / Simon Upton / Elle Decor

The kitchen range and hood are by FiveStar and Vent-A-Hood, respectively, the Rittenhouse Square subway tiles are by Daltile, and the island is an 18th-century Italian table.



Darryl Carter / Simon Upton / Elle Decor

A 19th-century oil portrait and a GE Monogram dishwasher in the kitchen.



Darryl Carter / Simon Upton / Elle Decor

An oak gateleg wake table by Scottish Connection, antique armchairs, a Baroque-style chandelier, and a painted barn door in the dining room.



Darryl Carter / Simon Upton / Elle Decor

In the studio, an antique gurney and desk, a partition made of banyan bark from Indonesia, and portraits of Carter's dog Otis on the wall.



Darryl Carter / Simon Upton / Elle Decor

The studio.



Darryl Carter / Simon Upton / Elle Decor

The wisteria pergola.



Darryl Carter / Simon Upton / Elle Decor

In a guest room, a duvet cover and shams made of a Rogers & Goffigon fabric; Carter designed the Farragut sconce for the Urban Electric Co.



Darryl Carter / Simon Upton / Elle Decor

An antique horn chair and curtains of a Rogers & Goffigon fabric.



Darryl Carter / Simon Upton / Elle Decor

In a guest room, a Tizio lamp by Artemide and a 19th-century oak cupboard.



Darryl Carter / Simon Upton / Elle Decor

A Carter-designed bed, a Chippendale armchair, and an antique chemist's scale in the master bedroom.



Darryl Carter / Simon Upton / Elle Decor

An oak-rimmed galvanized-metal tub, milking stool, and antique print in the master bath.



Darryl Carter / Simon Upton / Elle Decor

Exposed lath contrasts with beadboard walls painted in Benjamin Moore's White.



Darryl Carter / Simon Upton / Elle Decor

In the master bath, a lamp by Carter for the Urban Electric Co. and a sink vanity made from an oak table.




The Peace Keeper


Designer Darryl Carter modernizes his 19th-century Virginia farmhouse with bold gestures and a soothing palette

Designed by Darryl Carter
Written by Jura Koncius
Photographed by Simon Upton
Produced By Anita Sarsidi
Published by Elle Decor


Two years ago, Darryl Carter yearned to unwind. The Washington, D.C., interior designer's calendar was jammed with client meetings, plans to launch a furniture collection, and book deadlines. (The New Traditional is scheduled to be published in August by Clarkson Potter.) The pressure was on, and "I needed a place to decompress," he says. Carter knew where he could do just that. He had always loved the Plains, a Virginia hamlet about 50 miles from the nation's capital, and nearby he found an 1840s stucco-and-clapboard house with several fireplaces and a 140-foot-long wisteria pergola. "I was charmed," he says. "I bought it in two days."

Carter's rustic-meets-refined escape is a textbook example of the neutral palette and strong silhouettes he has made his professional hallmarks since giving up practicing law for interior design a decade ago. Stucco hearths and primitive wood benches contrast with an occasional rarefied English or Italian antique. Weathered barn doors have been repurposed into cabinets, espresso-color cotton curtains warm up the living and dining rooms, and a narrow 12-foot dining table made of reclaimed wood seats 16 friends for the house speciality: chicken potpie.

"I like to call the style of this place Modern Barn," says Carter, a tall man with a deep voice whose client roster includes Washington power players and international financiers. And his home offers all the relaxation potential one would expect from this rural setting. Here he can sit down and read a biography, refinish a piece of furniture, or indulge in another of his favorite country pleasures: listening to the sound of raindrops on the metal roof. "It feels remote," the designer says of the location, "but I am minutes from organic markets and a few very charming restaurants."

Carter starts to unplug from pressures and duties the moment he zips away for the weekend from his five-story Embassy Row townhouse, which was once the chancery of the embassy of Oman. The last leg of the journey takes him through the rolling hills and horse farms of bucolic Fauquier County, where the wooded countryside seems straight out of an 18th-century landscape painting. "The approach is hypnotic," says Carter, who typically cranks up an opera or hip-hop CD as he makes his way to his second home. "It gets me in my right mental place," he adds. "When I see the black cows, I know I'm almost there."

Though he's used to fully focusing on clients and letting personal projects lag behind, this time Carter put the completion of his rural digs on the fast track, swiftly unearthing antiques and architectural salvage stashed in storage, including a collection of antique taxidermy amassed from eBay and Paris flea markets. (Two wild boar heads guard the foyer.) His vision for his rambling Virginia homestead involved a gentle renovation of some of its unfortunate additions, rooms that had been tacked onto the house from the 1920s through the '90s. "The house seemed too new," he says. "It didn't feel right. It wasn't tactile enough."

In a determined effort to age the structure, Carter refaced fireplaces, removed every extraneous molding, and added more beams. Built-in cabinets were fitted with satisfyingly creaky old doors. The designer's instructions to the renovation crew were simple and straightforward: Be purposefully sloppy and avoid perfection. "Please note how poorly all the walls are done," he says proudly, quickly adding, "You can't name my contractor though -- he doesn't want any credit."

The designer scoured salvage stores for the most humble of trappings, such as weathered hinges and hardware. "I wanted everything thoughtfully old," he explains. Ceilings, walls, and floors are painted in Benjamin Moore whites. "Color is the best way to unify disparate surfaces," he says. Floor-to-ceiling niches -- Carter calls them cavities -- were built into walls near the fireplaces for storage; the stacked logs they contain seem like organic sculpture. In the kitchen, the pine cabinets gave way to open shelves of reclaimed wood. A longtime fan of subtlety, Carter reversed a smoke-color toile de Jouy to lessen its impact and used it to upholster two antique English reading chairs.

Guests get deeply comfortable beds (one of them has a feather mattress), shelves of interesting books -- which have been arranged for visual appeal, some stacked, others standing upright -- and sheltering wing chairs equipped with warm blankets. As Carter explains, "My romantic idea for this house was that people would just relax and read."

The master bath always intrigues first-time guests, partly for its poetic emptiness but also for its curiosity factor. An oak demilune table has been turned into a sink vanity, and there's an antique milking-stool table and a generous shower. One section of wall has been left artfully unfinished, the underlying lath revealed in all its humble, horizontal glory. But it is the room's narrow 1890s galvanized-metal tub that gets the most comments; it looks barely large enough to shampoo Otis, the designer's German shorthaired pointer. As the six-foot-three Carter notes, the tub isn't meant to be used: "It's art. I'm never getting in there."




Elle Decor May 2008


Elle Decor May 2008 Table of Contents

Elle Decor May 2008 Editor's Page


By Margaret Russell, Editor in Chief


The idea of spring-cleaning is magical to me. Since I’m by nature a tosser, not a hoarder, this season never fails to inspire a whirlwind purge of overpacked closets, musty magazines, and stacks of books that have managed to accumulate over the winter. I know I sleep better when my home is shipshape—who doesn’t?

There is something so deeply appealing about fresh, uncluttered rooms. Take, for example, this month’s cover story—the rural Virginia weekend home of Washington, D.C.–based designer Darryl Carter—which strikes the perfect balance between lived-in and luxurious. There’s just enough of what you need and nothing more in this rambling 1840s farmhouse, where the snow-white interiors are furnished with a seriously chic selection of antique and vintage pieces paired with sofas and chairs covered in humble, low-key linen and leather. I’m crazy for the breakfast room, which has an overscale rustic farm table and open shelves stacked with porcelain tableware within easy reach. Darryl also created bedrooms and baths that are somehow spare and sensual at the same time.

This is an honest, straightforward, pragmatic house. And though its color palette is quiet and the rooms unabashedly restrained, the feeling throughout is still surprisingly soulful. Even if you prefer a decorating style with more colors, patterns, and objects, there’s something to be said for editing out the superfluous in our lives and settling on what truly matters. So please excuse me; I’ve still got some cleaning to do.