The most prominent in The Kips Bay Decoraator Show House Palm Beach

The living space designed by Marshall Watson and Red Diane Gannis Interior
Nick Sargent
The eight years of The Palm Beach Edition from The House Show Decorator is very successful in full swing. This year, the place is a historical property in the thirties of the twentieth century in 1125 North Flagler Drive in the Providenccia Park in West Palm Beach, and overlooks the waterway inside the casting. The house includes red bricks with a balcony and a white balcony.
Twenty -three designers re -imagined the internal and exterior spaces of the property. Some offer their versions of Palm Beach style. Others introduce new ideas for how a traditional room appears. The exhibition will open for the public until March 16. Here are prominent rooms from this year screen.
Living and dining space by Marshall Watson and Red Dean Hans
The space for living and eating the dining designed by Marshall Watson and Red Diane Gannis inner
Nick Sargent
Inspired by the Golden Age in Palm Beach during the 1930s, the design team developed a long room with Art Deco background, from Exel in dirt colors. The ceiling was also supported by the color of Aqua, a gesture to the sky and the ocean, then added an additional throat with the boundaries handwritten the same colors as the walls. The room is intelligently divided into multiple areas for hanging, eating food, cocktails and games. In the creation of this room, designers were successful in introducing a new experience on Palm Beach Chic.
Loggia by Meg Lonergan Interior
Loggia by Meg Lonergan Interior
Nick Sargent
Outdoor space has given Romanian thrived by Meg Lonergan in exciting colors. From treillage on the ceiling to the tissue squares and squares that have returned the walls, from columns and statues to the original vision, this space picks up what is going on homes. Fantasy, bold and bold.
Loggia by Meg Lonergan Interior
Nick Sargent
Robin Henry Studio tape
Robin Henry Studio tape
Nick Sargent
Robin Henry invented a likable space that extends the clock of the cocktail to 24/7. The walls were covered in a background with blue and green floral flowers and then extended this color scheme throughout the bar – from the banquet to the network’s work, from the meter inspired by Rococo to the pillows of the royal shells.
Robin Henry Studio tape
Nick Sargent
Bathroom by Laure Nell Interior
The basic bathroom by Laure Nell Interior
Nick Sargent
The basic bathroom has some Je Nea Quoi. the It is difficult to miss the French inspiration, starting from the frame shots of the movie No Peskin Hanging over the bathtub, which is wrapped in the skin, is not different from the Louis Vuitton trunk. Then there is a background on the ceiling based on Mattis La Dansi. Trefoil marble details on the bathroom threshold raises French architectural engineering. But cutting the pieces is the amazing plaster of relief animals that highlight one wall.
The library written by Amanda Rainal inner
The library written by Amanda Rainal inner
Carmel Brantley
Inspired by the Lilly PulitZer icon, Emanda Rainal created the ideal Palm Beach room. With a wall covering the flying palm in the pale blouse and Kelly Greens from the Lee Jofa, which is launched this spring, the room is heavy and cheerful. Green continues to furniture options and the remedies of the statement. Lilly Pulitzer photos were published by Slim Aarons from the PulitZer family collection and different accents of different generations of Pulitzers by Rainal to give the library a sense of personal history.
The Rec Room by Moniomi Design
The entertainment room by Monica Santaiana and Ronald Alvarez from Monumi Design.
Nick Sargent
The duo behind Moniomi Design, Monica Santayana and Ronald Alvarez turned into traditional concepts of the gaming room on top and designed a single space in her vision. Fantasy in rich brown color that fits with touch surfaces such as Ping Pong Marble table that doubles as a dining table, a stone and hiding game table, and marble basketball collars. It is comically modern with a focus on the letter.
Wellness room
The Wellness Room by Indigo Pruitt Design Studio
Nick Sargent
Often when one thinks about the areas of wellness, white and silent colors come to mind. But for Mary Claude from Indigo Pruitt Design, Sanctuary is worthy of design upgrade. Here, sedative jewels such as lavender, rosemary and sage were used as a color painting. Instead of digestive furniture options, the designer chose bold, and dared to say this, often unconventional options in marble. The overall result is refreshing and unimaginable tremor.
The Wellness Room by Indigo Pruitt Design Studio
Nick Sargent