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Lisa Furey has heard the request countless times from her Main Line clients. Each has a different way of explaining it, but it all comes down to a similar desire.
“Clients don’t know how to put it in words that they want a transitional look,” says the Wayne-based interior designer. “They don’t want their house to be too traditional, but they also don’t want it to be too modern.”
Striking the perfect balance between these two distinct styles usually takes the discerning eye of a professional like Furey. Recently, two Radnor homeowners enlisted her help in achieving the “transitional” look they wanted from their renovation project.
Not surprisingly, many of the choices for the interior fell on the woman of the house. And Furey worked with her to create a home that’s both beautiful and practical. “I like all styles—traditional, contemporary, even country. I needed someone to pull all my ideas together and have them make sense,” the owner says. “I was nervous about having to make simple decisions—like what fabrics to choose. Lisa was able to make the process fun. There’s no way the house would look the way it does without her.”
The dining room’s casual sophistication is a reflection of the owner’s wish for a home that’s “inviting and comfortable, but not formal.” The room is a mix of styles, with two Windsor chairs on each side of the oval table, and an upholstered, skirted chair at each end. A distressed black hutch with cream beadboard back sits nearby.
“The homeowner uses this room on a regular basis, so it had to be comfortable,” says Furey.
The owners preferred gold, sage and brick red, so Furey carried that palette throughout the rooms on the first floor. Silk curtains with a gold, embroidered floral print cover both windows in the dining room. The room’s Oriental rug—with its light shades of sage green—was one of three Furey chose for the home.
The owners passed on a formal living room in favor of a cozy reading area with a wall of built-ins by Goebel Cabinetry in Exton. Furey added a lighted, center display covered by antique seeded glass. The room also has two upholstered chairs in a gold-and-sage paisley pattern. “That’s what they wanted,” says Furey. “A room that they would use.”
When the owners purchased their 60-year-old home, it was in the process of being expanded from three bedrooms and two-and-half baths to five bedrooms and three baths, along with an expanded kitchen and other changes. All that extra space presented a different kind of challenge.
“We basically had to furnish the whole house,” says Furey, adding that it didn’t bother her a bit. “It’s definitely easier than having to work around existing furniture.”