INSPIRATION

THIS CALM BEACH HOUSE IS WHERE WE'D LIKE TO LIVE RIGHT NOW

MAXIMIZE YOUR ROOM SPACE

Taking cues from her book Live Beautiful, the lifestyle maven Athena Calderone has refreshed her Hamptons beach house in her signature soulful style.

Forget everything you’ve seen on Instagram: If you need reassurance that interiors perfection is overrated, talk to Athena Calderone. The designer and entertaining guru behind lifestyle brand EyeSwoon quite literally wrote the book on how to create soulful spaces that don’t just check trend boxes.

In Live Beautiful (Abrams), the companion piece to her endlessly bookmark-able tome Cook Beautiful, she and 19 other trendsetters (including nate Berkus and Jenna Lyons), ruminate on the highly personal, sometimes subconscious decisions that have dictated the look of their homes, insisting that idiosyncrasy – the stains on a marble counter top, the verdigris of a brass fixture – is more alluring than aesthetic flawlessness.

“I’m so curious about how design unfolds and how one point of inspiration can lead to something completely unexpected,” says Calderone. “The common thread that I really loved among all of these designers was that they were very much into embracing imperfection and allowing themselves to tell a story only they can tell.” She elaborates in her book: “The pieces they’ve collected over time tell us about more than their taste in furnishings – they reveal the contours of life’s path, like a visual diary.”

So when it came to updating the rustic-meets-industrial kitchen in her midcentury Amagansett, New York, beach home, it was no surprise that she chose materials, furnishings, and accessories that—like Proust’s madeleines – would unlock the memories and unspoken narratives that fuel her creativity. It began with a graphic backsplash, floating shelf, and countertop of Calacatta Monet marble with subtle green-and-plum undertones that informed the palette for the rest of the room, from the Ash Grey paint by Farrow & Ball on the cabinetry to the antique lamp that resides at the end of the fluted-plaster kitchen island by Kamp Studios. “It was a continuation of the materiality study of the original iteration,” says Calderone, who took a DIY approach to the space. “I wanted it to feel elevated but still beachy.” Stainless steel appliances by JennAir adhere to the streamlined aesthetic, while 1970s woven rattan stools from Spain keep the vibe calm and collected.

The old kitchen was kind of dark and heavy,” says Calderone. “I wanted to do something that was light and bright but still allowed me to be led by material.” She’s a proponent of open shelving and designing utilitarian spaces as you would other rooms in the house, so artwork and decorative ceramic vessels find their place among the tableware.”

So when it came to updating the rustic-meets-industrial kitchen in her midcentury Amagansett, New York, beach home, it was no surprise that she chose materials, furnishings, and accessories that—like Proust’s madeleines – would unlock the memories and unspoken narratives that fuel her creativity. It began with a graphic backsplash, floating shelf, and countertop of Calacatta Monet marble with subtle green-and-plum undertones that informed the palette for the rest of the room, from the Ash Grey paint by Farrow & Ball on the cabinetry to the antique lamp that resides at the end of the fluted-plaster kitchen island by Kamp Studios. “It was a continuation of the materiality study of the original iteration,” says Calderone, who took a DIY approach to the space. “I wanted it to feel elevated but still beachy.” Stainless steel appliances by JennAir adhere to the streamlined aesthetic, while 1970s woven rattan stools from Spain keep the vibe calm and collected.

The project spilled into the adjacent living room, where she chose to offset some of the darker, more masculine architectural elements with contrasting neutrals. “We’re all so inspired by what everyone else is doing; we put things in these little drawers in our minds and never know when one of those drawers is going to blow open,” she says of the design process.