
In His Own Home, an Interior Stylist Takes a Light Touch (Published 2021)
Colin King, a 33-year-old Brooklyn Heights-based interior stylist, spent a year living in his 1830s brownstone apartment before the Covid-19 pandemic provided him the time to truly consider his own living space. Prior to March 2020, King's professional life involved extensive travel for design stories and advertisements for brands like Hay and Benjamin Moore, leaving little opportunity to focus on his personal environment. His 500-square-foot second-floor walk-up retained many original features due to his landlords' commitment to historical preservation, including six-over-six windows, a working marble fireplace, oak flooring, and 12-foot ceilings. Despite entering through an 1980s-era galley kitchen and nondescript bathroom, the classically proportioned living room, illuminated by nine-foot-tall shuttered windows, immediately captivates the eye.
King's professional work aims to infuse elegance into mundane spaces, and his Instagram showcases his distinctive style through poetic still lifes in a palette of off-white, dark gray, and brown. These compositions often feature groupings of ceramics beneath a lone branch or understated details from his projects. When King began redecorating his apartment, it primarily contained a Mario Bellini Le Bambole sofa, a 1970s travertine round marble table, and a 1960s LC4 chaise by Charlotte Perriand, Le Corbusier, and Pierre Jeanneret. The existing white walls in the living room appeared too yellow, and other areas were bland. His collections of design books and contemporary art were stacked or piled, and items he sourced for clients, such as ceramic vases, houseplants, table lamps, and mirrors, were largely absent from his own home.
After a meticulous repainting process, which involved three attempts to achieve the perfect murky gray in the bedroom and an off-white for the rest of the apartment, King began furnishing his space. He acquired a blocky white Utrecht armchair designed by Gerrit Rietveld from Cassina, a velvet and walnut stool from Green River Project, a custom table lamp by Danny Kaplan, and vintage midcentury woven rattan Pierre Jeanneret chairs on loan from a friend. In the living room, he placed a hand-thrown Modernist vase by Lucie Rie next to an old mirror on the mantel. Unlike his fast-paced styling projects, furnishing his own apartment was a deliberate process, allowing him to "listen to the space." The resulting aesthetic is stark yet layered, subtly blending 1970s Italian design, early American architecture, and French Modernism, a sophisticated approach not always seen in younger designers prone to eclecticism.
King's apartment exemplifies the minimalist aesthetic he has refined over the years, a journey that included various detours. Raised on a farm in rural Ohio, he discovered dance at 13 and moved to New York at 18 to pursue it, later relocating to Los Angeles where he faced similar frustrations in the performing arts. He then worked as a fitness instructor and estate manager before finding his calling as a digital content producer for Consort, a design firm. There, he gained experience in styling and photographing vignettes for social media. In 2017, King returned to New York, initially juggling multiple jobs, including personal training and managing social media for One Kings Lane, while also pitching stories to magazines to establish himself as a stylist. Within months, he was fully booked, allowing him to concentrate on his styling career. His apartment continues to evolve, as he seeks a large oil painting for his bedroom, a vintage Joe D’Urso side table for his living room, and his first plant, a black olive tree. The home stands as a testament to the power of a light touch in revealing a space's innate beauty and the patience required for its realization.
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