Summerour Interiors

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This month’s annual kitchen issue has me thinking of my favorite kitchens that have previously graced the pages of AH&L. Here are a few:


I could bake for hours in this classic white kitchen by Summerour Interiors.


Featured in our 2008 Lake Keowee Showhouse, this “non-kitchen kitchen” blends seamlessly into the combination living/dining room.


This beauty by Beth Webb is the epitome of country chic.


John Oetgen takes a bold approach in this vacation home nestled in the Blue Ridge mountains.


Kitchen guru Matthew Quinn used a striated marble for this cool and contemporary island design.


I’ve always admired this kitchen by Sara Steinfeld, who makes traditional walnut look positively sleek in this stainless steel-clad space.

What are some of your favorite kitchens that have been featured in AH&L?

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We publish a lot of beautiful homes in Atlanta Homes & Lifestyles, and they always manage to wow me with a superb mix of styles and phenomenal architecture and interior design. But for many of these featured homes—unless found within our January issue, which crowns the kitchen as king—the kitchens can become lost among the flurry of decorated rooms and design schemes that encourage these spaces to seamlessly blend in, rather than stand out. Still, as a common philosophy of top designers—and their fans—goes, the kitchen is “the heart of the home,” where so much of daily life takes place. This special space must not only flow well into the overall design scheme, but be very highly functional, too, making it perhaps the most important room to get right—and so many of our designers have. Though these extraordinary examples may not be easy to overlook, I thought I’d pull my favorite kitchens from the AtlantaHomesMag.com archives to give them their spotlight dues. I think you’ll agree that they’re just as stunning, in their own right, as the homes that contain them.

While my personal style leans a bit toward layered, lived-in, even eclectic interiors with liberal pops of color, my preference for the kitchen is sleek, shining and, most often, white. This gorgeous example, created by Summerour & Associates for a couple in the Peachtree Battle area of Atlanta, is the one place I believe I could become a culinary queen. I would never want to leave!

Another Summerour kitchen, created for the 2008 Atlanta Homes & Lifestyles Designer Showhouse at The Reserve at Lake Keowee, exudes the quiet verve of Flemish style and feels extraordinarily inviting thanks to its delicious symmetry and neutral color scheme.

The feature on this sweet storybook of a home, owned by acclaimed metalsmith Andrew Crawford, was an absolute joy to write. His family's entire Westside cottage radiated with light and laughter which no doubt contributes to this kitchen's cheerful atmosphere.

In a designer model at Buckhead's Sovereign high-rise, Barbara Westbrook's selections for cabinetry, countertops and decorative accents offer the perfect balance of earthiness, depth and lightness.

Interior designer Bill Musso and Bryan Cooke's Alys Beach retreat features a custom kitchen decked out in streamlined walnut cabinetry and the optimal dose of shine, contributed by stainless steel appliances, acrylic bar stools and blown glass. The spacious and efficient space, Musso says, is fantastic for cooking.

Interior designer Alice Cramer delighted her client when she gave her a kitchen in her favorite shade of blue. I fell in love with this room first for how well the ivory, cool blue and stainless steel meld into a lovely color scheme, but once again when I discovered that my favorite retreat in WaterColor, Florida, boasts kitchen cabinetry in the same hue.

When Barbara Howard designed the Buckhead home of Mayer and Beau Buisson, she found that she loved the existing kitchen so much—designed by Lauren DeLoach of Lauren DeLoach Creative Studio—that she left it as-is. The soft taupey-gray and ivory blend seamlessly into the design scheme she conceived for the rest of their charming abode.

The rustic and ravishing kitchen in Mimi Williams' Highlands, North Carolina, mountain retreat is just the sort of place you'd like to kick back and catch up with extended family and friends over a long, leisurely evening.

Suzanne Kasler and William T. Baker conceived an awesome example of a neutral kitchen with open display cabinets, supreme fixtures, a well-placed work triangle and rich, weathered, walnut-stained floors for a showhouse at Lake Oconee's Reynolds Plantation.

Never one to miss the mark, Kasler flips her kitchen style 180 degrees for a colorful, contemporary approach at a second home in a Carillon Beach, Florida. Bolstered by the lovely pattern of Ernest Gaspard & Associates' "China Seas" fabric, the look feels fresh, young and vibrant.

Thankfully, even more exceptional Atlanta Homes & Lifestyles kitchens are on the way! Look for two, in particular, in our April 2010 issue, due on newsstands and in subscriber mailboxes mid-March.

Now that I’ve shared my top picks, I’d love to hear about your own! Feel free to browse AtlantaHomesMag.com and post a link to your favorite kitchen(s) in the comment section below.

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On January 9, I spent my Saturday wandering through the creative labyrinth that was the Gift, Home Furnishings & Area Rug Markets at AmericasMart in downtown Atlanta, a whirlwind tour of pop-up booths, inventory-packed showrooms and exciting new product introductions spanning dozens of floors of three monolithic buildings. After a fruitful day—in heels—I hobbled to a flight of escalators to make my evening exit when I happened upon the temporary booth of Thomas Paul merchandise and alike brands, which Thomas Paul, dapperly dressed, was manning himself. But the designer—a darling of the indie blogosphere as much as the high-end boutiques known for carrying his stylish pillows and boldly patterned rugs—offered the greatest pick-me-up when he gave me a guided tour of his latest collections before their retail debuts.

Thomas Paul

Thomas Paul

And even as I await their arrival in Atlanta stores, there’s yet another Paul venture on the way. It may come as no surprise that Duralee has had incredible success with its first book of Thomas Paul-licensed fabrics, which is why I was so delighted when I received an e-mail this morning announcing the official release of Thomas Paul 2, the designer’s second edition of modern fabrics for the to-the-trade-only company. From a graphic take on pagoda, to a contemporary Chinoiserie bound to upstage even DwellStudio’s, to cool must-have nautical motifs, the fabrics—available locally at Atlanta Decorative Arts Center suite 423—are certain to be hits with designers and their clients alike. My favorites from the new collection below:

This mod pagoda pattern invites limitless possibilities.

This mod pagoda pattern invites limitless possibilities.

This would be super for a flowing window treatment. Just imagine the sun streaming through!

This would be super for a flowing window treatment. Just imagine the sun streaming through!

I would love to make this into a seat cushion for a vintage cane chair—or maybe a PierceMartin number in wicker or bamboo.

I would love to make this into a seat cushion for a vintage cane chair—or maybe a PierceMartin number in wicker or bamboo.

This cheery floral would be brilliant as a duvet cover.

This cheery floral would be brilliant as a duvet cover.

For the non-designer readers among us (myself included), Calico Corners also carries a number of last season’s Thomas Paul designs on retail (I bought the Stockholm pattern in berry for some flanged pillow covers at my own home). And thankfully, Atlanta Homes & Lifestyles readers can get 15 percent discount on any Calico Corners purchase by using a coupon from our spring Luxury Savings Book, arriving in mailboxes—and online at AtlantaHomesMag.com for convenient printing—in mid-February.

PLUS! See how Keith Summerour incorporated a Thomas Paul print into the master bedroom of his Meriwether County home by visiting the story, “The View From Here,” at AtlantaHomesMag.com.

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