Decorating Styles & Decor Traditional Decorating & Design Ideas Details from the Paris Runway Inspired This Elegant Home Corey Damen Jenkins helps a grande dame of a house spin a version of itself in tune with today. By Sally Finder Weepie Sally Finder Weepie Sally Finder Weepie is a writer and editor with nearly two decades of experience reporting on interior design, renovations, kitchen and bath design and products, and garden design. She has written for trusted national publications: Renovation Style, Country Home, Better Homes and Gardens, and Traditional Home, where she is currently the architecture editor. She also was editor of Sustainable Home magazine, a special publication from Dotdash Meredith published in 2021. Sally graduated from the University of Northern Iowa in Cedar Falls, Iowa, earning a bachelor's degree in general studies with a minor in journalism. Throughout her college career, she worked as a writer and editor at the Northern Iowan newspaper. Learn about BHG's Editorial Process Updated on October 6, 2022 Share Tweet Pin Email If this house were a song, it would be solid gold. The owners, who built the Connecticut home in the early 1990s, cut a classic, investing in handcrafted millwork worthy of Colonial Revival structures shaped a century ago. The magnificent curved moldings, grand casings, and graceful window mullions were the ultimate symphony for the eye—except, sadly, no one could see them. George Ross "Every window and door was covered with heavy swags, jabots, draperies," designer Corey Damen Jenkins says. "The house was overweight. So I put it on a diet." George Ross Although this home was built in the 1990s, it celebrates Colonial Revival details, including eye-catching dormers and porch columns. The homeowners had visions of the miraculous transformation to come. Readers of Traditional Home, they had seen what Jenkins did with a house similar to theirs in Michigan, and they flew the Detroit-based designer to New Canaan to flex his decorative muscle. After stripping away yard after yard of anachronous chintz, Jenkins assembled a new wardrobe to make the exquisitely boned home sing. "I always look to fashion for inspiration," he says. "When I started this project, the Paris runway was spilling with colors that the homeowner loved. The aubergine, lapis, and mint were the same colors I saw in her wardrobe." George Ross Jenkins' couture makes a bold debut in the foyer, where a mint runner descends the dark treads of a white paneled staircase. A marble-look wallpaper serves as a contemporary canvas for a salon-style grouping of gilt-framed oils from the couple's collection of antique art. Individual picture lights illuminate each piece. Of-the-moment pattern and color keep the entry filled with stunning traditional millwork and a gallery wall of collected oil paintings feeling current. "The picture lights are beautiful and functional; there was no need for wall sconces. But with the different-size artwork, it was a feat to orchestrate the wiring," Jenkins says with a rueful chuckle. "I didn't make life easy for the electrician." George Ross A vibrant chevron fabric, echoing the aubergine of the home's newly lacquered doors, skirts the entry table and repeats on wing chairs in the living room. The chairs, which bring symmetry to a sophisticated gathering space wrapped in a fresh mint wallcovering, are among the few new pieces of furniture that Jenkins brought to the home, whose owners, he says, had "bought well" initially. The new pieces and reinvented vintage pieces, including a formerly black chinoiserie coffee table reimagined with white lacquer, blend in a space that embraces tradition in a fresh way. designer Corey Damen Jenkins It was a challenge to make a new picture using pieces from an old puzzle. — designer Corey Damen Jenkins "We were able to bring the pieces back to life by reupholstering them and putting them in different rooms, which gives the house a new perspective," Jenkins says. "Coming behind another designer, it was a challenge to make my own statement—not copy and paste but make a new picture using the pieces from an old puzzle." George Ross Abstract elements, including fabric on host chairs and a newly discovered art piece above the fireplace, give youthful energy to a dining room distinguished by fine antiques. Jenkins "shopped" the homeowners' basement and attic, where he culled great old pieces that deserved a second life. A gilt trumeau mirror crowns a vintage sideboard; gilt-framed art pairs with a graceful demilune table. PHOTO: George Ross PHOTO: George Ross Reinvention came not only from fabric but also from paint. Jenkins dipped "brown" Queen Anne dining chairs in white lacquer, for example, to play like sculpture against floors that Jenkins darkened to a rich coffee-bean brown. The dining room's existing tile fireplace surround, featuring a blue-and-white Dutch motif, put a twist in Jenkins' palette. "The homeowners wanted to keep it because it speaks to their heritage and is nostalgic for them," the designer says. He used the blue to launch a lacquered, mirrorlike wall treatment. "You can put your makeup on using these walls," Jenkins says. "It makes the room a jewel box, a special destination." PHOTO: George Ross PHOTO: George Ross Equestrian wallpaper and a consignment-shop mirror marry in the informal powder room; the formal powder space gets an elegant look from large-scale wallpaper and a shapely console sink. George Ross Fabric from a Finnish design house directed the color palette in the primary bedroom, now pounds lighter with Jenkins' removal of a bed canopy and skirt, heavy draperies, and layers of sheers. "It was like the Princess and the Pea in there—fabric overload," Jenkins says. "Now it feels so much more clean-lined, fresh, and bright." "Passed-down furniture is back," Jenkins says. He makes the "brown" pieces feel current by pairing them with contemporary upholstery, drapery fabric, rugs, and bed linens. PHOTO: George Ross PHOTO: George Ross He used a pretty botanical print from Marimekko on draperies and a settee. Paint and a new marble surround update an existing fireplace. George Ross Light bounces off lacquered walls and a fireplace surround remade in marble. One of Jenkins' signatures—a couture-inspired tape treatment—trims a cozy chair situated under a halter that belonged to one of the homeowner's beloved horses. designer Corey Damen Jenkins There's nothing to talk about if everything is brand-new. — designer Corey Damen Jenkins Like many of the pieces that now decorate the home, it's a conversation starter that sparks stories of adventures past. "There's nothing to talk about if everything is brand-new," Jenkins says. "This couple had so many great things stowed in their attic and basement that we rediscovered and brought back into their lives." George Ross Jenkins found photographs taken by the homeowners' daughter when she was a teenager and framed them to form a meaningful art wall in the primary bathroom. A funky new fabric on the chair juxtaposes traditional columns. Filled with new energy, their home remains a classic yet feels reborn. All it needed was a fresh spin by the right artist. "It was like Whitney Houston remaking Dolly Parton's 'I Will Always Love You,'" Jenkins says. "I got to reimagine something wonderful." Was this page helpful? Thanks for your feedback! Tell us why! Other Submit