December 20th, 2011 by erin

And now dear friends, I bring you the last post of the year. Don’t be sad — we’ll be back after all the booze has burned off, but I need a break (ok, I need a chance to get some projects done). Besides, you really won’t care what I have to write after you see this incredible house tour, brought to you by Graham & Co bloggers (and generally cool people) Jeff Madalena, owner of fashion label/boutique Oak, and Jason Gnewikow, creative director at NY Design Studio Athletics. Jeff happened to leave a comment on my terrifying fireplace post, suggesting I take a page from his book and go clean and minimal a la his house. I think I cried a little after I followed the flickr link to his gallery, both because I was a smidge insanely jealous, but also because my faith in humanity has been restored. It is possible to finish things! Your house can look amazing!

MIRACLES CAN HAPPEN!

catskills house tour

Just check out that before and after! My fireplace is weeping tears of joy at the possibilities.

So without further ado, I bring you a Chriswanzmukkuh gift for the ages. From tiling to flooring, a ton of this was DIY. You (and more importantly I) can make things pretty, too. Let’s do this!

Location: The Catskills, NY

Size: 2100 sq ft.

Time you’ve lived there: 3 Years

J&J: We found the home more or less by accident in early 2008 while visiting friends for a weekend in the Catskills. It had not been inhabited for quite some time and had been on the market for about 18 months. The house itself was not much to look at and was in need of a full gut renovation, but what really drew us to it was the sweeping views of the mountains. The renovation was done in three stages. We started by reconfiguring what was a kitchen, bathroom and sunporch into two bedrooms and a new bathroom. The second stage was incorporating the kitchen into the great-room to create an open concept kitchen/dining/living room. In the great room we raised the ceiling and clad them in pickled-pine wood planks. We also boxed in the original brick fireplace and had it refaced with concrete. The third stage was converting the old garage into a master bedroom with full a bath. We brought in reclaimed, unfinished barnwood floors and replaced the garage door with a floor to ceiling picture window and additional door to the patio outside.

great-room

The great room is definitely where we spend the most time. Lighting is a cluster of classic Nelson pendants, the sofa is the Long Life by Ihreborn from Scandinavian Grace. The big picture window in the background we designed to echo the shape of the adjacent hallway.

fireplace_straight-on

The refaced concrete fireplace.

fireplace_side-on

This is our Philodendron who is easy like Sunday morning. He doesn’t need a whole lot of attention, just a front row seat at the window and a bit of water here and there. In the background is an odd chair we found at a garage sale that is sort of a mid century style love seat. We stripped it, pickled it and reupholstered the cushions in a geometric black and white Anni Albers print.

windowchair

This old chair has been dragged from apartment to apartment and here’s the truth kids, she’s from Macy’s….yep,we said it..Macy’s. We’re not hating, she’s cute.

kitchen

The kitchen is positioned at one end of the great room. We do a lot of entertaining in the Summer so this makes it easy for everyone to be in the same place and also provides easy access to the outdoors where we eat a lot. We used simple Ikea cabinets.

living and kitchen

Between the two of us and adobe illustrator, we were able to visualize most everything for our contractors. We didn’t actually do anything too crazy — really just moving walls here and there, so we spent a good bit of time figuring out what would work for us and then did very detailed (to scale) aerial drawings of the floor plans.

windows_table-merch

The table here is a 10 foot long farm table. We found the top at a barn sale and constructed the base out of reclaimed 4×4′s. A host of bits and bobs live in frequent rotation at the end of the table.

bedrrom1

This was our main bedroom before completing work on the downstairs master. The bedrooms are all pretty modest in size. We embrace the low to high — simple white bed linens and pillows from Ikea, throw pillows are Belgian linen Libeco from High Falls Mercantile, the wall hanging is actually a hammock we bought in Tulum, Mexico, and the print next to the bed is a Cy Twombly we bought in Paris.

bedroom2

The closet door in the second bedroom actually took us forever to find since we had to source the door after we had the framing done; we finally found it at a barn sale in Stone Ridge, NY. Light fixture is an industrial table lamp we found at the Brooklyn Flea Market. Bed linens and pillows again with the Ikea, the throws are the same Libeco Belgian linen from HFC. The print is a Joseph Albers from the 1972 Munich Olympics.

upstairs hall

This is the hall that connects the upstairs bedrooms and bath to the great room. We installed and finished a lot of the flooring and then stained the upstairs floors black using india ink for a true black. It’s actually pretty simple — india ink is super black, relatively cheap and surprisingly only needs to go on very thin. The only wrinkle we ran into was that we first tried to finish it with pure tung oil which didn’t really work so we ended up using waterlox to finish it because we wanted a really matte finish. That stuff was kind of nasty odor wise. I think we’re going to use osmocoat next time, which is supposed to be pretty odorless.  Windows in the hall and one wall of the living room were rehabbed factory windows.

upstairs-bath

The upstairs bathroom is a bit tricky to photograph. On the opposite side of the vanity wall is a open shower. The pillar wall shares all the plumbing for both the sink and shower. Sink basin is Duravit, fixture is an industrial wall mount from Chicago Faucets and the cabinet is from Robern.

downstairs-landing

We had to build up these downstairs floors as they had previously been a garage. We used reclaimed barnwood for the floors throughout. We did a lot of heavy black and white down here. The doors are some old store doors we found somewhere and painted black, of course. The photos in the background are by NYC artist Ellen Frances and were made for an Oak Gallery event.

downstairs_bath

The master bathroom houses a black bottomed clawfoot tub. A lot of the fixtures in this room were sourced from really random places. The tub fill is a brass spigot originally used for a laundry basin found on ebay. Subway tile on the walls and Carrara mosaic tile for the floors.

bedroom3_2

The master we converted from the garage is a pretty straight-forward minimal bedroom. We replaced what was originally a garage door with a floor to ceiling picture window. The throw is a charcoal grey, wool army blanket. Linens are Ikea.

bedroom3

This was our first renovation so the biggest challenge was bringing what we saw in our heads into reality, and communicating with contractors to bring that vision to life. The details are always the tricky things — seeing how a window finishes against a wall or where moldings come together are the things you never really think about until you have to make a decision. The other big challenge is also the fun part — sourcing and buying all the fixtures and furnishings. The style of the house is a mix of Scandinavian modern with touches of vintage industrial pieces, like steel factory windows sourced from a local architectural salvage yard. We are fortunate to have a handful of really talented NYC ex-pats that have established great interiors shops here in the Catskills, like Scandinavian Grace and High Falls Mercantile, so that makes shopping locally a bit easier. Renovating the house was a labor of love and and a real learning experience. Now that we’re just about to embark on a new project in Brooklyn we’re glad to have somewhere escape to on the weekends.

Thanks so much to Jeff and Jason for allowing us to scrutinize their beautiful home via the wonder of the internet! Rest assured I will be stalking this post during the holidays to read all your comments. I hope you enjoyed this tour as much as I did.

Happy Everything, homies! See you in 2012!

Related posts:

  1. MLS House Tour: Part the Second
  2. MLS House Tour Part 1
  3. We Bought a House!
  4. Our Horrid Room: A Design Confession
  5. Yet Another House Hunting Fail

28 Responses to “House Tour: Jeff and Jason’s Rustic Chic Retreat”

  1. Bianca says:

    AMAZING!

  2. Connie says:

    OMG–when can I move in? Erin you MUST do your fireplace in concrete. It would look fabulous.

  3. So good. Nice work, Jeff and Jason! I’m having a hard time understanding how that could have been your first renovation… my jealousy meter is reaching heights that are dangerously close to bursting. And I’m absolutely loving the restraint with regard to color – the mostly neutral, black and white scheme is alluring, calming, texturally exciting and leaves the bursts of color to pop like a juicy pomegranate seed. Yum. Thanks for the great last post, Erin. Happy projects, happy new year, happy new home! xoxo

  4. mb says:

    I realized that I held my breath, or I think I did the entire time I looked at those fabulous photos. Gonna go look at them again… unbelievable reno. Waaaaa, I want I place like that, minus the net over the bed.

    Cement for your fireplace before Santa comes, you will get more presents.

    Woohoo. Merry Christmas dear. Merry Christmas.

    mb from big D.

  5. ModFruGal says:

    I’m kinda speechless that this was their first renovation! I love the relaxing, clean vibe of the whole space. Modern without being cold, rustic without being country…it’s really beautiful. *standing ovation* Happy Holidays to all!

  6. Wow – beautiful!

    (Happy holidays, Erin + Karly!)

  7. nkp says:

    They had me at the pickled ceilings and pink sofa. What an amazing, REAL, home. I love it all, but especially all of the green flora scattered here and there, the gorgeous, considered vignettes, and the simple, warm interiors. Hugely inspirational!

    Hope you have a wonderful, restful break!

    xo-nelya

  8. meow! That is one fine looking abode. Love so much of it- the fireplace, the floor, all the black, everything in the bathroom!!! Fabulous, fabulous job. Makes me want to move into the woods stat.

    Happy Chriswanzmukkuh, E!

  9. erin says:

    I know J&J appreciate all the kind words, so thanks for commenting everyone!

  10. Rosie says:

    The floors, the ceilings…and most everything in between is a delight. Though would anyone hold it against me if I admitted I sort of like the “before” picture too? I would also love to see the exterior of this house for some bonus thrills!

  11. the misfit says:

    The minimalist/modern is not my style (I basically don’t like any art or architecture dating after 1900), but one of the interesting side effects of an obsessive immersion in design and decor…stuff…over the last few years is that I am learning to appreciate when a style other than mine has been done really well. And this obviously has. Kudos to these gentlemen for a fully-realized vision.

  12. Love your bad girl blog.
    I blame Oprah for ‘happy holidays’ and pc-ing the planet.. so have a MERRY CHRISTMAS!

  13. i want a concrete fireplace real bad now.

  14. [...] 房子位于美国纽约州卡茨基尔山区,房屋经过主人Jeff Madalena于Jason Gnewikow的重新改造整个气氛焕然一新,清新朴素,温馨典雅……更多请访问:http://design-crisis.com/?p=3610 [...]

  15. Inviting and gorgeous!

  16. 1. I’m with Rosie and didn’t actually HATE the before but 2. I totally and completely LOVE the after. What is most striking to me about this more than anything isn’t their perfect taste, or their ridiculously amazing first stab at renovations, or the restrained pallet; it’s actually how much patience they had in sourcing the perfect materials for each space. I would have gotten so flustered and overwhelmed trying to pull that off there’s no way I would have stuck around ebay long enough for the exact right brass spigot to pop up. Boys: you are awesome. Love everything. Come do my house next!

  17. jj says:

    wow amazing! But that cant be an original cy twombly. Even the small ones go for millions.

  18. Rebecca says:

    God that pink sofa. Superlove it.

  19. Great job done on the renovations. Looks fantastic!

  20. WOW! This is such a great house. Jason is an old friend of mine, 18 years now… and I do believe he was one of the first friends that made me think about design. He had a vintage green door, hanging on his wall in Chicago, years and years ago. That always stayed with me. Love what you two have done with your home.

  21. nata says:

    a.m.a.z.i.n.g.

    that is all.

  22. Elise Meslow Ryan says:

    Would you be willing to share the specifics about the bathroom carrara marble floor tiles (size and source), as well as information about the grout color on the tile walls and floors? Is it the same color grout throughout? Is it wearing well? We are facing a renovation of a bathroom and debating our options for the floor. I had thought 1″ carrara hex tiles with dark grout for the floor, but I love the look of your rectangles. Thanks!

  23. [...] Above: The Catskills kitchen of Jeff Madalena and Jason Gnewikow, via Design Crisis. [...]

  24. Jasmine Blackman says:

    Hi, I just love your balck floors in your hallway! Beautiful! I was thinking about using waterlox as a finish as well. Did you use the waterlox original sealer or waterlox satin finish or both? how many coats did you use?
    How are your floors holding up?

    Thanks so much!

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