A Swedish Collected Home In Upstate New York – Swedish Gustavian Decorating
In the March 2013 issue of House Beautiful Magazine, featured a home with a unique flair for the Scandinavian style. The owner spent years collecting Swedish pieces, and together with her designer, Charles O. Schwarz III, they created a home that captures all the charm of a period Swedish interior.
To give warmth to the home, Schwarz installed planking on the walls and bead board on the ceiling and painted it all Farrow & Ball Picture Gallery Red. beautifully they mix the red with rustic wood.In the breakfast room, dark blue walls add so much drama. The Gustavian chandelier and mirrored sconces which draw attention to themselves in this dark room, as the lights are turned down and the candles are lit at night.
The home is surrounded by neutral furnishings and paint colors. This color combination can be seen in the rugs, the choice of cabinetry, tile work in the bathroom and the soft Scandinavian furnishings. A beautiful selection of wallpaper is seen throughout the house in the living room, and several bedrooms, adding a softness to this home. Farrow & Ball’s Ringwold wallpaper complements the living room’s creamy checkerboard flooring, which was painted by the previous owner. Pay special attention to the choice of paint colors on the trim work, which nicely blends with the overall theme of each room, while at the same time highlights the beautiful architecture of this Greek revival home. See so many more beautiful pictures of his home at the House Beautiful website
“Söderbo” A Home Untouched Since 1920
This Swedish home takes several chairs and combines them with a day bed. One way to unify several pieces of furniture is to simply paint them the same color, as they have done here.
“Söderbo” is a summer home, and perfect for all those who love history, because this home is practically untouched. Nothing has changed since the house was decorated in the 1920s. In fact, every piece of furniture, every picture, and the decor is such as it was in the early 1900’s. The interior lets in lots of light as large windows reveal the beautiful greenery outside. Elegant white painted furniture makes the home larger than it really is. Reading a book, playing a few games, and having a hot bath might be what you would do in this home in the summer months. Although you may have to haul in the water, and manually heat it! The modern amenities of the home are missing, but that doesn’t stop the owners from getting away and enjoying all the life that this property has to offer. Water must still be carried out and the food collected in the root cellar, so the children of the home don’t have to wonder how grandma and grandpa did things, the old way of live is very evident in the day to day functioning of the home.
“Söderbo” in the past was only used as a summer house. Servants were brought out into the country with lots of luggage, and the residents from the big city enjoyed the summer life to rest and enjoy the rich fresh air, and all that the countryside could offer. Besides the main house, the property is equipped with a boathouse pre-existant from the mid-1800s, a root cellar and a cabana by the water.
Inside the house, white painted wooden furniture shows a classic Swedish design which can be seen throughout the home. The furniture was originally purchased back in the days of the era’s most fashionable department store NK. The various pieces of furniture are seen in the country style which if fluent in the dining room, bedroom, desks, chairs and shelves. The kitchen is set up to function for food preparation, such as cooking, baking and canning. The upstairs of the home is mostly how it was originally. Some fabrics have been worn through time and replaced, but the beautiful Art Nouveau wallpaper in the parents’ bedroom are original. Gather some ideas from this time period for your home.
Images and full article found on husohem.se
“Söderbo” A Home Untouched Since 1920
A rare pair of Swedish Art Deco 2-arm mirror sconces designed by Gustav Bergstrom. Frames are gilt over pewter and Incised with a serpentine pattern.The frame tops are decorated with a sculpture of a lotus flower flanked by 2 mythical sea creatures. Candles are newly wired for candelabra bulbs. Mirror glass is original and show highly desirable movement in the reflection. Sconces are the perfect example of “Swedish Grace” style.
Delicate gilt wood Swedish Art Deco wall mirror with cared details depicting a sunburst and ancient oil lamps. Mirror glass is original and has a one inch beveled edge
8 Swedish Art Deco Klismos dining chairs griffin inlays in bone
Elegant set of 8 Swedish Art Deco “Klismos” style chairs in solid elm and elm root-wood veneer. Each chair features bone inlays of griffins and bakelite sabots that mimic ivory. Newly restored and reupholstered. An accompanying dining table is available.
Carl Bergsten Swedish Art Deco chairs from M/S Kungsholm 1928
Elegant pair of Swedish Art Deco bergeres designed by architect Carl Bergsten for the luxury ocean liner M/S Kungsholm. The chairs are documented in the 1928 photograph of one of the Kungsholm’s reading
rooms. Chairs are elm wood veneer, newly restored and reupholstered. Bergsten designed the Stromsholm cafe chair which is considered an icon of 20th century Swedish design.
Elegant Swedish Art Deco sofa designed by architect Carl Bergsten
Swedish Art Moderne Drop-Leaf Secretary Writing Desk
Uniquely sized drop-leaf secretary in sleek golden elm. Leaf folds down to reveal shelves, cubbyholes and six drawers of golden masurbjork (birch burl) and a drop-leaf desktop – just the right size for a notebook computer. Lower section features three ample drawers with brass ring hardware – a great space to store your computer, office equipment or extra bedding or clothes. Perfect as a small home office – close the leaf and it’s a beautiful piece of furniture in any room




Helen Olsen’s Rungstedlund Home Revealed In Gods & Gardar Magazine
After 17 years in Kenya, Danish author Karen Blixen returned to her childhood home in Rungstedlund, Denmark . The magazine Gods & Gardar reveal the history behind this magnificent property, where Danish elegance meets the drama of Africa.
“It was Karen’s father, Captain and author Wilhelm Dinesen who bought the property in 1879.
Two years later, after his marriage to Ingeborg Westenholz, the couple moved there and had five children, three daughters and two sons. Karen came to stay at Rungstedlund until age 28, except for two periods. The first period was the year the family had to leave Rungstedlund when the farm was restored after a fire in 1898. The second time Karen did Rungstedlund for a long time was when she studied art in Paris.”
“What makes Karen Blixen Rungstedlund so fascinating to visit is that the different rooms reflects two distinct phases of her life. For just as Karen packed some things from Rungstedlund before his trip to Africa, silver candelabras, English porcelain, Bohemian crystal and mahogany furniture, so she brought her most prized possessions, the essence of her Afrikaår, when she moved back to Denmark. On Rungstedlund intermingled memories of Africa still with antique family heirlooms, large carpets, delicate lace curtains, mahogany tables and furniture in the Louis Seize style and a Norwegian Rococo stove from in 1760.”
How To Combine African Elements Into Your Swedish Style
1. Keep the Architecture Nordic.
It is remarkable that Karen Blixen’s home looks both Scandinavian, and African at the same time. How did she pull it off? One of the ways the Scandinavian feel is so clearly evident is in the architecture. The framed walls are one of the hallmarks of the Nordic style. You don’t need several thousand dollars to get this look. One way of doing this is simply by adding some wood trim on the walls. To get Blixen’s look, spray paint your wood trim with gold paint, and finish it off with gold leaf.
Easy Gold Leafing- French Style Authority
Another way of adding architectural detail to your walls is to paint lines in shapes of boxes. A post that clearly shows this idea is Lars Sjoberg’s Swedish Gustavian Decorated House. In this post, you can clearly see lines painted on the walls, which gives the appearance of architectural trim. Where to start? If there is a door in the room, or windows, start with the box above the window or door.
2. Include A Few Moroccan Textures
In the dining area, Karen Blixen uses an area rug with a strong pattern. In this photo, moroccan floor tiles are used to create an entry way. The photo is quite close to Nordic design. A simple white is used on the walls, and the flooring gives this room the edge it needs. The gilt wood mirror gives this room a polished touch. An inexpensive way off adding the pattern into the room is to use throw pillows and tablecloths.
Royal Design Studio sells a moroccan stencil in a star diamond pattern. Consider stenciling your walls in a bright color found in Africa. Consider placing simple painted furniture with this pattern such as white furniture, or black painted furniture. With a white and orange pattern, white furniture can still work quite elegantly. Incorporate pine flooring, and add texture to the walls in natural wood, or metal such as what Karen did with her study.
3. Avoid Clutter.
One of the biggest mistakes people make is have too many accessories. Showcase your art, and draw attention to your furniture by having less accessories, and an open floor space. Even if you jam pack the furniture in, be sure that table tops don’t have dozens of ornaments. Reduce them, pair down, and donate pieces that simply just don’t work with the overall theme.
4. Incorporate The Colors Of Africa
The colors of Africa central around earth tones, such as brown, cream, rich greens, oranges, and reds. For example, you can work with these colors on the walls such Karen did for her home. If the dominant colors are the richer colors, consider toning down the room with a few natural wood pieces. White furniture would provide a rich contrast to the vibrant hues on the walls. If you choose to go with white walls, consider working with painted furniture, or heavily distressed furniture with the richer colors in the upholstery. Can you imagine, raw pine wood floors, with a white settee, gold accents, with burgundy upholstery? Perhaps throw in a rich red chest, and the room can take on the African flavor quickly. To include the Swedish style, pick upholstery fabrics with sweeping vertical lines, stripes or florals, or a combination of both.
6. Create A Wall Collection
Karen’s study is an excellent example of a collection that reflects the African culture. Collect African hand-made pottery, baskets, rugs, swords, plates, knives, but stay away from the masks, or statues which are involved in the ceremonial worship. Woven baskets are an ancient form of art in African culture. Typically crafted with simple geometric designs, African baskets will vary in design, making them great to decorate with.
Space is one of the main considerations when planning a wall based around objects or collections. Avoid a crowded or crammed look when using African wall decor, a little can go a long way. Placing too many items together can look messy, and give the idea that the look isn’t well thought out. Spacing your pieces, or collecting like objects, like a collection of baskets, or knives pays special attention to individual pieces.
Another designer trick is to place even tones together. Working with the color wheel will give you a great idea of the colors to work with, and those to avoid. Try to place the same colors, hues or tones together to give a more organized presentation. Metal, woods, and natural materials work with practically every color, although when working with china, or pottery, it helps to work with the color wheel, when placing items on a painted wall.
Picture Credits
- African Designer Catherine Raphaely
- Medieval Strong Box Ottoman $406
- British Plantation Chair $361
- Floral Bouquet Pedestal Table $185
- Medieval Cross Frame Arm Chair$350
- Grand Medallion Crescent Console Table $455
- African Designer Karen Roos
- Camellia Wall Console Table $229
- Chateau Marquee Occasional Fabric Arm Chair $588
- Mademoiselle Cezanne’s French Slipper Chair $244
- The Beaufort End Table $310
- The Scottish Country House by James Knox
- Early 19th Century Painted Swedish Mora Clock- Dated 1827-
- A nice small scaled Danish grandmother’s clock in the 18th century style made during the 1950’s
Swedish Style Traditional Home Magazine





Daniel Romualdez’s Swedish Montauk Home
It is no doubt that the hottest designers are using distressed Gustavian furniture in their own homes. Designer Daniel Romualdez is one of those designers. His Montauk, New York home also shows off a captivating white based interior. Romualdez breathed new life into the home using only splashes of blue, white and black. The main dining room shows a beautiful collection of seashells in weathered frames. The room is furnished with 18th century Gustavian furniture with a geometric blue and white upholstery. Most of all the pictures we picture below are credited to the Wallstreet Journal. Here are a few links to this homes interior from Corbis. Here is a picture of the stairway that was installed in limed pine, in line with the Swedish styles found through the house.
Decorating with seashells can add a natural touch to your home. Here are 10 tips to getting a high end look with seashells:
1. Paint your walls in soft pastels. Keeping the wall color light will create a serene feel and allow you to play off the colors found in the lighter natural tones of seashells.
The ocean and the sky are both blue, so blue should be incorporated into the color scheme. Borrow looks from Daniel Romualdez’s home by choosing upholstery in blue and white. White based backgrounds for upholstery choices keep within the classic textile choices found in Sweden.
-Light blue or green walls are also great colors for a room decorated with seashell decor.
-If you do use brighter blues, consider using it in an accessory as Daniel Romualdez’s does with a vibrant floral centerpiece. Add layers of duller blues in your rooms with accents of brighter tones of blue sparingly.
2. Mix in reds, oranges, and golden hues within your home decor to provide a contrast to the white walls, and white shells such as what Daniel Romualdez’s does with the black hand painted doors, and black frames on the walls.
3. Consider installing wall panelling, which can be stained in a soft cream or white. Wood adds an organic layer that is commonly found in Swedish decorating. Clean, brilliant white walls make a great backdrop for bold color splashes or natural wood accents.
4. Sofa or floor pillows incorporate the feeling of comfort. This Sea Shell Linen Pillow Cover with Jute & Mother Of Pearl Embroidery has both the linen fabrics found in Swedish decorating, as well adds a bit of the pearl shine we find in the sea.
5. Cover furniture or home decor with shells. A neoclassical bust with smaller seashells is a sophisticated approach to using shells in your decor. All you need is a nice looking neoclassical bust, hot glue and a variety of seashells.
-Make a crown for the bust or display it on it’s own.
–Here we see a rustic bust, with a seashell crown.
–Here we see a mirror made with hand collected shells and Ikea mirror frame. All the shells are facing the same direction rather than the sporadic placement that we see with seashell art.
–Here we see a beautiful floral display with an urn decorated in seashells
Plaster Busts on Ebay
7. Consider presenting your collection of shells as a display on your wall with corbels. Instead of displaying the smaller shells, collect the larger seashells, which can make more of an impact. Swedish decorating is known for clean, uncluttered looks, so bigger shells are better in a Swedish scheme. Corbels can be rather expensive, but there are ways of getting corbels that match without spending $300 on each corbel. Make your own shelves for pennies with concrete molds such as this one from Mold Creations. Concrete Success has the perfect mold shelf featuring a sea shell in the design, selling for $34 dollars. This allows you to make endless shelves for your collections, without spending any more than for the mold itself, and the plaster or concrete.
Interesting Finds on Ebay And Amazon
– This square sea shell mold would be a rather interesting texture to cover an entire accent wall in a bathroom with. It has a rather primitive fossil quality to it.
-Silver Tone Decorative Spiny Jewel Nautical Sea Shell Home Decor $27
-Luxury Lane Hand Blown Art Glass Seashell Centerpiece 7.5″ tall by 12.5″ long $25
-White Pearlized Chambered Nautilus Sea Shell Decor 5″ – 6″ $25
-100% Real Sea Shell-4.5″ Original From Haiwaii,$9
-Small Brass Compass Rose Nautical Wall Plaque $50
-Bathroom Decor- Set of 3 Decorative Clear Glass Bottles with Nautical Sea Shell $71
-Luxury Lane Hand Blown Art Glass Seashell Centerpiece 4.5″ tall by 9″ long $25
-Aluminum Sea Shell Decor 4″H, 10″W $36
-Round Rustic Wooden Nautical Porthole Mirror– $70
-Set of 2 Seafoam Green and Cream Sea Shell Pattern Rustic Aged Decorative Bowls $110
-Gorgeous Set of 4 Mini Sea Shell Covered Spheres $48
-Decorative Wooden Paddle $19
-Wooden Nautical Sailboat Yacht Model w/ Shell Sail $24
See our other post Daniel Romualdez’s Breathtaking Late-Eighteenth Century Farmhouse
- Display cabinet with Shell Collection- vine.wisteria.com
- Dark Blue, Striped Scotchgarded Outdoor And Indoor Fabric By The Yard – $23
- Reversible Floral Upholstery Grade Fabric By The Yard – $29
- Fabric for Upholstery Suzani Blue & Beige 54″ $19
- Daniel Romualdez’s Montauk Home- An Outdoor Pergola –Wallstreet Journal
- Daniel Romualdez- –Wallstreet Journal
- Anh Duong Renovates Her Cliff-Top House In Montauk With the help of Daniel Romualdez
- Read More at GQ Magazine
Daniel Romualdez’s Montauk Home-www.williamwaldron.com
Another View Of This Room From www.corbisimages.com
You can see the trim was painted blue, and the floors limed. In addition, the doors were touched up.
Consider Topping A Bust With A Seashell Crown
Swedish Furniture UPCLOSE Wallstreet Journal
Fanciful Sea Shell Bust- www.berkshireantiques.com
Louis XV Console Table Covered in Seashells-chintz-of-darkness.blogspot.com
Mimi McMakin, founder of Kemble Interiors.
Corbels holding a collection of seashells-debrahalllifestyle.blogspot.com
Anh Duong Renovates Her Cliff-Top House In Montauk With the help of Daniel Romualdez

Ruby Beets Swedish Rustic Home
In a corner of the living room, a 1940s mercury glass lamp stands on a rough, round Empire-style table next to two 1920s Scandinavian painted chairs. The graceful wing-backed chaise dates from the 1930s and is upholstered in simple white canvas duck, with natural linen pillows from Ruby Beets.- House Beautiful Magazine
If you haven’t ever seen Ruby Beets home, you are in for a treat. Featured in House Beautiful Magazine back in July of ’06 , this house has the perfect mix of old world charm,and rustic surprises that make it very interesting to the eye. The raw painted furniture, iron decorative items, wood panels and paint color choices are particular elements of the interior styles found in Sweden.
If you enjoy the country cottage looks, but want something more upscale, borrow ideas from this home. Here are a couple suggestions from this interior.
1. Have Slipcovers Made- Spend the extra money and have tailored slipcovers made that will give you the comfortable feel like this home. Swedish textiles were mostly made from organic materials. Consider materials like muslin, duck, or canvas. Many people are taking drop cloths sold in hardware stores and bleaching them. Today you can buy pure white duck or canvas cloth in off white, and various shades of cream, and blue amongst other colors.
2. Invest in Great Antiques– I am not one of those people who are afraid of touching antiques. My best advice, is if you find a sensational chair, improve it and make it your own. Buy the upholstery fabric that makes you happy. Buy the hardware that you will enjoy looking at day after day. Make it YOU!
It is amazing what a strip job will do for your wood furniture. Taking off the varnish will allow the paint to sink into the wood, that when you do to distress the wood, the overall finish looks so much better than painting it alone. For years I have used a chemical stripper until I bought a heat gun, and I never knew that stripping furniture was soooooo easy and fast! If you want to get a rustic look for your furniture, working with the bare wood is the ticket to high quality Swedish looks.
3. Use Black Somewhere- Swedish interiors are usually based around light colors such as blue, light greens, gray and so forth. You would be amazed how nice black stands out against a lightly colored wall. I used to love black painted furniture, that everything was painted black until I fell in love with lighter painted furniture, and all of our furniture was repainted in white or gray. Our walls in our house are painted a light blue, and after debating what color to paint a hallway floor clock, I decided to plunge for black, and was it ever a great decision! Everyone comments on it, because it sure stands out against the lighter colored walls. Contrast can be a surprise! Black colored furniture looks exceptionally well in lighter interiors. Even if you have just one piece in black, it can look sensational!
Here are some of the comments from Ruby Beets featured in Home Beautiful that were particularly interesting
“I was a vintage clothing dealer in the’70s. I’ve been buying old stuff forever. Ruby Beets used to be about the found object school of antiques. My partner and I would buy a dresser and it would have peeling paint and we thought that was romantic. But now we want the drawers to work—enough with the drawer bottoms falling out! The new store is a cleaner, more modern and edited version of what we used to do. My house is too. Life is irritating enough at a certain age. Anyway, I like a lot of white, you can see that. All the furniture is slip-covered in muslin or cotton duck so I can remove it and wash it, which I do every six weeks. I guess, unless something horrible happens. I like big graphic shapes. Those white dishes and things in the kitchen cabinets, some are vintage and some are new ironstone, which we carry in the store. That cabinet we
bought from the local hardware store here. It went out of business, and they had 52 feet of glass cabinetry that we took and put in the kitchen. ”
“When you walk in, you don’t know what age the house is, but it feels like something old. I love it because it feels transparent inside. Hie boards are painted gray like the sea in winter, and because we have no near neighbors we have nothing on the windows—you can see from the front door all the way through to the water at the back. You can see a lighthouse in the distance. The girls used to say they lived in a lighthouse.”
“My husband is an obsessed fisherman, but he’s catch-and-release. He also collects taxidermy fish. He probably has 50 or 40 in his office.”
What is the significance of the name, Ruby Beets?-“Oh. I don’t know. I made it up years ago. But it’s catchy, right?”

The Romantic Baroque Style: Part 4 – A Collectors Home
The Dienst’s Home
A Baroque Wing Chair Upholstered In Gray Linen, sits beside a Baroque Chest
In Sweden, the Middle Ages lasted for approximately 500 years, until Gustav I of Sweden seized power in 1523. Most all of the buildings were constructed out of timer, until the 12th century, where stone became the predominant building material for the construction of the churches. Lund Cathedral, and Husaby Church are excellent examples of this style. The Gothic style brought brick to Sweden as a new fashionable building material, and many of the cathedrals were fashioned out of brick, while others were made of limestone. 1,500 of Sweden’s 4,000 churches from the Middle Ages survive from this period. The 13th century city walls around Visby are some of the best-preserved medieval city walls in Europe, and in fact, the street layout of Stockholm’s Old City still can be seen designed with a medieval flavor.
Sweden rose to a great Power in the 17th century, the privileged class and government began to build again. The idea of the architect and designer was established and the profession developed. During this time works of Simon De la Vallée and Nicodemus Tessin the Elder became well known in Sweden. The work of Nicodemus Tessin the Younger moved the architectural development in Sweden during this time into High Baroque, such as Stockholm Palace.
As we discussed in Part 1, a notable example of the Baroque style in Sweden was seen in Strömholm. In part 2, we discussed King Gustav Vasa, whom was the ruling power at the time, and how the Catholic church dominated the design circles which influenced art across Europe and abroad. In Part 3, we discussed both Skokloster & Steninge Palace as striking examples of the Baroque style, which architect Nicodemus Tessin the Younger was responsible for. In part 4 and 5 we hope to inspire you to achieve this look in your own home looking at an example of a collector of Swedish antiques and what they did for their own home working with Baroque Swedish antiques in particular.
Jill Dienst’s owner of Dicost + Doner specializes in Scandinavian antiques from the 17th century to the mid-20th century. Jill Dienst’s passion for collecting for her own home over the years paved the way for her success as an antique dealer. Before opening up her own business, Jill Dienst spent decades at some of the finest institutions in the art, which allowed her to gain an appreciation for antiques and design world.
All images and information from Martha Stewart.
The centerpiece of the living room is a Gustavian sofa, which has been
upholstered in plain linen.
Mid-twentieth-century pieces by Danish designer Poul
Henningsen are mixed into the room
The simple, roll-up window shades are the same kind used in Swedish manor
houses, but these are made from a sheer fabric.
The living room walls and mantel were painted slightly different variations of
the same color.
The painting is a 1911 portrait of Swedish boys in school uniforms sit above the mantel.
The statues came from a rustic church in southern Sweden.
The candlesticks work beautifully with the gilt portrait of the Swedish boys
A black painted Gustavian chair and Gustavian giltwood console sit in the entryway

The second-floor landing features a large baroque cabinet from Sweden, which
retains its original paint.

In their daughter’s room, a nineteenth-century bed has been reupholstered in a
heavy velvet.
French nineteenth-century chair by the bed. Dala horses, a traditional motif of Dalarna, Sweden sit in the window. The carved chest is German.
Martha Stewart’s Creative Director- Erik Pike’s Gustavian Townhouse In New York Part 1

MARTHA MOMENTS: Eric Pike Leaving MSL
Eric Pike is Creative Director of Martha Stewart Living. Stefan Steil is an interior designer and founder of Stelish. Some of his design work can be found at Stefan Steil. Portraits taken at their townhouse in Manhattan.

There are very few Gustavian styled homes photographed that are truly ALL Swedish inspired. After looking at thousands of photographs, I KNOW it is rare to come across a home that is decorated or renovated all around the Swedish styles. Even if a home isn’t decorated to look centuries old, I find it rare to come across a person passionate for a particular period design that is pigeon-holed into a particular category. It is thrilling to say the least to see a home that is based entirely around a theme, such as Georgian, Egyptian, Early American, or my favorite Gustavian. When a designer sticks to a particular style of antiques, and thinks through the architectural elements and paint colors carefully, a story emerges that allows you to walk back in time.
Not everyone has thousands of dollars to spend on antiques, or money to change the architecture, flooring, cabinetry or fixtures, so many of us have to start somewhere with one bench here, and a chair there. Building up a home that is entirely from one period and time frame can be incredibly exhilarating, and also quite expensive, but it doesn’t have to be. You don’t need to have ALL genuine antiques to get the Gustavian appearance in your home. In this blog, I have put together dozens of posts with decor and furniture that look Swedish and aren’t. Some are costly, and others aren’t. My own home is filled with a ton of vintage furniture that is made over to look Gustavian. Incorporating a few genuine pieces sure help! Your home should be what makes you happy, and not what a blog or a magazine tells you it should be.
It is truly rare to come across a home that is based entirely around the Gustavian look, and not exist in Sweden, and that is the case with Martha Stewart’s creative director Eric Pike. His townhouse in downtown NYC is one of these rare homes where the entire house is designed around a Gustavian palette.
Eric Pike And Stefan Steil’s New York Gustavian Styled Townhouse- Photo Credit An Afternoon With Blog
Eric Pike And Stefan Steil’s New York Gustavian Styled Townhouse
Eric Pike And Stefan Steil’s New York Gustavian Styled Townhouse
The Blog,….. An Afternoon With posted some incredible pictures of the home giving you extra ordinary angles that allowed you a better glimpse into the rooms.
In one of the pictures a stunning oil painting hangs in the bedroom of Daniel Webster, a Massachusetts senator in the mid-1800s and an ancestor of Eric’s.
While the whole townhouse looks like it is within one color, several tones are used. In the bedroom, and the office, the ceiling is a light blue. A light beige is used in the office with storage in a coordinating color. Vibrant colors are used in the closets, keeping the overall palette neutral.
Martha Stewart’s Creative Director- Erik Pike’s Gustavian Townhouse In New York Part 1
Pike tells Martha Stewart Magazine that he faced a challenge that we all face: the need to maximize storage. He sacrificed a few feet in every room to allow for deep doorways that contain hidden, paneled closets, each devoted to specific belongings. “I’ve been collecting for years, and I’ve made everything work in this space,” he says.
Many Gustavian styled homes aren’t cluttered, and here you will see an excellent example of a paired down look. Collectibles are grouped together much like the closet featuring Pikes tableware and silver urns, or grouped on side tables. The look is very much clean and organized.
Look at the impressive storage in the above three photos. Boxes are used in closets for odds and ends keeping everything in place. In any home, there needs to be a lot of attention paid to storage if you want an uncluttered appearance. This is especially true for smaller sized apartments. For my own home, I have used the over-sized boxes that come with Crate and Barrel for my blankets which sit in the closet. When I go into my closets, they look clean and organized even if they are in boxes.
In this post I show where you can buy large boxes with lids for as little as $3 Paint the boxes with flat paint, and customize your closets by painting the interior and the boxes so both match. If you have a home that is based around gray, white or beige, consider doing something extra special for the closets. In my storage room in my garage, I am going with a Alpine green with boxes to match. Why not! Consider a bold blue or even a baby blue for your closets. Pantry and linen closets can be one of the most creative areas to experiment with color.
Martha Stewart’s Creative Director- Erik Pike’s Gustavian Townhouse In New York Part 2
The settee, chest, and rounded-back chair in this photo are genuine Swedish antiques. Eric purchased the other chair at auction and had it copied for the dining room. The tables in the room are vintage, which he painted himself. Look at the three color combinations on the walls. It appears that the wall color, crown molding and ceiling colors are slightly different tones. With the painted antiques, and color of upholstery, this room is rich with detail.
The gray wood flooring doesn’t go unnoticed, tying together the various rooms in his home. The wide planks were bleached, then stained a neutral gray. He decided to upholster all of the living room furniture in a single gray linen, allowing individual antiques to be unified as a set. Hints of silver are found in the candlesticks, light fixtures, and hardware and have always been a classic Gustavian element found in Swedish style.
The house originally appeared in Martha Stewart’s September issue way back in 2005. “I wasn’t going to buy until I could find the right place,” he tells Martha Stewart Living Magazine. He ended up renting a small one-bedroom apartment for sixteen years until the perfect place showed itself to him. The 1840s Federal-style townhouse on a historic block had all the right bones for what he always had in mind.
In this photo from Marthas website, a decorative box houses some objects he used for inspiration. If you look closely, you can see two pictures of the townhouse before renovations. New York City architect Richard Perry, Pike set out to make the apartment his own.
“I like the neoclassical forms and the sculptural lines combined with rustic painted finishes,” Pike says. “They have no unnecessary embellishment — there’s a purity in that.”
I have loved his townhouse for years. I hope you find as much inspiration from his home as I did.
See Martha Stewart For More Information
Martha Stewart’s Creative Director- Erik Pike’s Gustavian Townhouse In New York
The sitting area above lacks the height compared to the rest of the apartment, so a skylight was introduced into the space. Support beams are concealed yet present a dramatic look to this room. Eric sought a square pedestal table to complete this room; finding none, he designed one with architect Richard Perry.
You would never know a television hangs over the living room mantel because an antiqued mirror lifts to reveal it. Look at this photo of the kitchen where one wall houses a refrigerator and washer and dryer behind cabinet doors. A toaster and coffeemaker are housed in an appliance “garage” on a tray that pulls out so you can pour in water. The bathroom is designed just right to make it appear bigger with glass shower doors. The bedroom and the bathroom are the most modern rooms in the home.
Eric Pike is Creative Director of Martha Stewart Living. Stefan Steil is an interior designer and founder of Stelish. Some of his design work can be found at Stefan Steil. Portraits taken at their townhouse in Manhattan.

Monique Waqué’s 200 Year Old Farmhouse In Northern Germany
Photography by Andreas Von Einsiedel Picture Credit
Owner Monique Waqué discovered this 200 year old farmhouse located in northern Germany, and turned it into her dream home. The house is decorated with Gustavian furniture in a Swedish country look. You can get her style too with a few key furniture pieces.
There are a number of Swedish dealers on 1st dibs that sell authentic Swedish Gustavian chairs just like what Monique Waqué has in her home. Buying antiques from Sweden allows you to get genuine pieces that have been loved for years. As you can see Monique Waqué has Gustavian country chairs at her dining table in a pale yellow.
This home certainly has a country flare. All the choices are rustic, painted with country Swedish colors. An oval tray sits on the coffee table. Consider turning to a hand painted tole tray in the color scheme that you are basing everything around. My favorites are the floral tole trays which have an elegant feminine country appeal. Collect a color and consider painting your walls to match the tole trays. The floral hand-painting gives a very distinct country look.
Getting this look doesn’t have to cost you a fortune either. There are a number of chairs that have this same look for less.
Check out this post for lovely Linen Sofas– I have collected several pages of lovely linen sofas available on amazon. (Located under the Skona Mag Picture- It takes 2 minutes to load the widget)
Set of six, 18th Century style, Gustavian chairs. Beautiful scraped patina. Strong construction. Perfect set for dining chairs –the GARTEN Antiques and Garden Elements
- The Chestnut Hudson Dining Chair $199
- 5-Piece Shaker Dining Set, Black $299 Why not sell the table and keep the chairs?
- Tapered Leg Table One that Could Be White Washed $270
- Small Tapered Leg Table- Could be One in Front Of The Sofa Or an End Table $99
- Perfect Bench For A Hallway or Dining Table, or Even As Patio Furniture $106
- Lovely Tapered Leg Console Table $121.
- Low Bowl Urn with Handles $29 Celery Green
- Petricia Thompson Antiquites d’ Europe
- Cote Jardin Antiques
- www.georgialacey.co.uk
- lizalaserow.wordpress.com
- brownrigg-interiors.co.uk
- Talisman
- Galerie Half
- A Tyner Antiques
- Laserow Antiques
Hooker Melange Sofia Writing Desk sold by Hooker Furniture is an antique reproduction of the classic Louis XVI desk.



Magnus Lundgren’s Swedish Gustavian Home
Skona Hem had a wonderful write up on Magnus Lundgren’s Home. If you LOVE the antique Swedish style, do visit Magnus’s blog, because it is one of the few blogs devoted to Swedish furniture and decorating. His blog is always a real treat for me to read. Magnus has a true love for 1700 Swedish-century furniture. For the past ten years he has filled his home with Baroque, Rococo and Gustavian furniture originating from the years 1750-1810.
He worked closely with a construction company and the overall transformation took just over three months. They installed rough planks and small details such as incandescent lamps with porcelain sockets, electrical sockets and switches. They kept the floors and beams, and instead of putting up drywall in the ceiling and putty, they installed rough plank exterior insulation. Magnus mentions he uses egg tempera and linseed oil for his paint finishes. Check out his beautiful home decorated in Swedish Style.
Magnus Lundgren’s Swedish Gustavian Home
Magnus posted this stunning oil portrait on his blog which is absolutely breathtaking. The colors in this oil painting are the classic colors that are found in Gustavian style.





























